"b41ed794-361a-4c9c-a802-1520c68fe65e"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2016-05-17"@en . "1915-04-24"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/mherald/items/1.0311355/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " REVELSTOKE\nChief lumbering, railway, mining, agricultural and naviga-\nt'on centre between Calgary\n\"\ the Pacific ocean.\n\\nV\nThe Mail-Herald\nTHE MAIL-HERALD\nPublished twice wsskly\u00E2\u0080\u0094Real\nby everyone\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ths recognized\nadvertising medium (or the\ncity and district.\n^\nVo. V-No 33\nREVELSTOKE. B.C. SATURDAY APRIL 24, 191,\n$2.50 Per Year\nTEACHt * TO\nSCHOOL BOARD\nClaim That Board Has Infringed\nPrerogative \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Object to\nMonitor System\nAt u meeting ol the school board\nlast ninht a letter from the principals\nol the Central and Selkirk schools in\nwhich it was stated that the principals held that the board had exceeded its authority in giving certain, instructions us to the management of the schools, was read and\ndiscussed. The letter was as follows.\nThe Board of School Trustees,\nRevelstoke, B. 0.\nGentlemen\u00E2\u0080\u0094We, the undersigned\nprincipals ot Central and Selkirk\nschools respectively, desire to enter\nprotest to your board as follows:\n1. With reference to thc recent order of the board requiring the appointment of monitors from among\nthe pupils to supervise the other\npupils on the play grounds: Wc beg\nto point out that we are opposed to\nthis because we believe that such action would have a tendency to encourage spying and tale-bearing on\nthe part of the pupils to an undesirable extent. Moreover we are ot the\nopinion that such a step is unnecessary, as any breaches of discipline\nbrought to our attention have been\ndealt with In a manner which wc believe to be effective. If at nny time\nthe trustees become personally aware\nof cases which have gone unpunished,\nwe ieel that it is their duty to bring\neuch to our notice without delay.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A08. We would further protest\nagainst the tone and substance of a\nreport of a board meeting appearing\nin Che Mail-Herald Of Saturday,\nMarch 20'. This report gives an impression that the control of the\nprincipals aaAl. teachers o\or the\npupils is far from what it should be\nwhile on the contrary we believe chat\nthe conduct of the pupils of the Ue-\nvelstoke public schools, both on the\nschool premises during school hours\nand on thc streets outside ol school\ntours, will compare very favorably\nwith that, to he lound in any other\ncity in the province. Here we would\npoint out with regret the omission of\nthe trustees to bring before us lor\ninvestigation specific Instances ot\nunsatisfactory conduct an the part\nof pupils.\n3. We would further represent it\nas our opinion that in laying down\nrules for the administration of discipline the hoard is exceeding its\nauthority, and would ask that such\nmatters he left, as provided in the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0school law, to thc judgment ot the\nprincipals. \t the same time we invite the co-operation of the trustees\nin the manner previously suggested,\nthat is by,bringing before us for Investigation any cases of unsatisfactory conduct on the part of pupils\nwhich they have reason to believe\nbave escaped our notice.\nWe would therefore ask that vou\nwithdraw the orders which you have\nissued with rcgurd to the employment of monitors and the r. The bill was laid on the table.\nThe complaint of two men that\nthey did not obtain a fair share of\nwork at the power plant was discussed.\nAid. Smythe said that some men\nwho were not experienced held jobs\nunder thc city for loni: periods on\nthe plea that they were experienced.\nHe advocated giving the men two\nweeks work at a time.\nC. North, city electrician, said that\nevery man applying for work h.id\nbeen given a chance. Of ES names on\nthe list in had already been given\nwork.\nA debate fallowed as to the best\nmethod for stimulating the consumption of ele\"tric power during th \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nsummer, Mr. North advocated the employment of electricity for coo'iing\npurposes. He Bald that very little\npower was used in the summer and\nthat the city could aflord to olTer an\nattractive rate and he advised the\npurchase of an electric stove for demonstration purposes. The possibilities will be investigated and a Stove\nwill probably be purchased and plac\ncd with BOme householder. Some of\nthe aldermen also suggested that il a\ntoboggan slide were laid out near the\nsiew ski jump electric power might be\nused to pull the toboggans up the\nI bill and might be made to pay expenses while at the same time fostering winter spirts. This will also be\ninvestigated and reported upon by\nMr, North.\ni A petition Irom John Carmichaei,\nRobert 'Robertson. William Stager,\nf.H. Peterson, Mrs. A..C. Ades. M.\nJMcManus, Robert Miller, J.B. Philip.\nL. I'ullin. lv Marino, A. Cancelllere,\nJ. Screno, und A. Baraducci. resid-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 cuts on thc north side of Downie\nstreet, wns received asking for the\n; enlargement ot the water main htm\nono to four inches and also that thc\nmain be lowered. The present main\nserves JO bouses, the pressure is consequently low and the water freezes.\nThe petition Will be considered at\nthe nc\t regular meeting of the council.\nA recommendation from the health\ncommittee that H.J. McSorley be\noffered WOO In full satisfaction ol his\nclaim against the city for the use of\nhis hotel as a quarantine station and\nlor hoard for which the city might be\nliable was adupted on the motion of\nAid. Smythe, seconded bv Aid. Mar-\n'son, Aid. Bell voting against the\nmotion.\nj The mayor said that the nmount\n| would not go far toward compensating Mr. McSorley for his loss of busi-\nmess but the city was under heavy\n! expenses at the preBent time and he\nhoped that Mr. McSorley would ac\nIcept th\" health con mittecs proposal.\nDAMAGE BY\nBUSH FIRE\nPiles of Posts at Malakwa\nDestroyed \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Valuable\nTimber in Flames\n( Special to the Mail-Herald)\nMalakwa, B. C, A,pril 23'.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A large\nliusb lire is raging near F. X. Wintem-\nbergs place, and several large piles\nof posts belonging to J.H. Johnson,\nP.X, Wiutemberg and J. Hosklnson\nwi re destroyed by the fire. Another\nlarge bush tire is raging between\nSoisqua and Sicamous, and a lot of\n\aluable timber is telng destroyed.\nP. Campbell homestead inspector is\nin Malakwa on business.\nA patriotic concert is being held in\n.Malakwa hall on May I, by all local\ntalent. Thc concert is got up by tho\nyoung people of the valley who are\ndoing everything to make it a success.\nThe lecture given by Principal Hutton was well attended. Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Paulding of Craigellachie were\nnoted among the visitors. Principal\nHutton is a very good speaker and\nhandled his subject well.\nMrs. H. P. Dings and little daughter returned to Revelstoke I on Sunday\nafter a short visit with her friends\nMr. and Mrs. Crawford.\nMr. Haegstrom and J. Johnson\nwent to Revelstoke on business on\nTuesday.\nDISEASE IS\nMYSTERIOUS\nTwo Horses Die of Unknown\nMalady-Has Been Fatal .\nin Okanagan\nA mysterious disease, the cause of\nwhich is unknown, has caused the\ndeath of two valuable horses belonging to J. Nixon whose ranch is across\nthe river. One horse died last winter\nand the other a fortnight ago.\nThe symptoms of the disease are\nweakness, constant Bhivcring and\ncracking of the joints, with a temperature of 104 to 105. The animal\nfeeds heartily until a tew hours of\ndeath, which usually occuib from 21\nto 36 hours after the symptoms tirst\nbecome nsticeable.\nDr. Thomas, who attended Mr.\nNixon's horses, says that tho disease\nis new and its cause and nature unknown. Many horses in the Okanagan\nhave suffered from the disease, which\nis usually fatal, and although investigation has been made the cause\nof the disease is i still a mystery.\nLOCAL BRANCH\nOVERSEAS CLUB\nNEW CLUB AT\nHOMETO GUESTS\nAny Person Born in British Entertainment Given by Young\nHolden Red Cross workers are sup-\nj lying a cot for the Canadian Rei\nCross hospital at Cliveden, England.\nCommencing this week electric cur-\nlent will be available for ironing in\nPenticton homes\u00E2\u0080\u0094on Wednesdays and\nFridays.\nREVELSTOKE COMPANY IN\nNEW OVERSEAS REGIMENT\nColonel Cavis Expected to Visit City in Few Days\u00E2\u0080\u0094If\nCompany Recruited in City Will be Trained Here\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Battalion Will Later Assemble at Central Point \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nMember for Kootenay Returns From Ottawa-\nElection Probable\nTerritory Eligible for Membership\u00E2\u0080\u0094Aims of Club\nIt was decided to form a branch of\nthe Overseas club in Revelstoke at a\nmeeting hc'ld in the City Hall on\nWeduesduy evening. The meeting\nformed itself into a committee to secure members and will hold another\nmeeting on Wednesday at 8 p.m. in\nthe same place. Aiiiyone born in the\nBritish possessions is eligible to join.\nTho membership fee wi'U be'$1.00 per\nannum. Since the war started branches of the club have; sent 4'U0,00!> packages of tobacco to the troops at tbe\nfront.\nThe object of thc club is (1) To\nhelp one another. (2) To render individual service to the iKmpire. (3\u00C2\u00BB\nTo draw together in the bond ot\ncomradeship British people the world\nover.\nThc diuh motto is taken from\nTennyson as follows:\n\"We sail'd wherever \"ship could sail,\nWe founded many a mighty state,\nPray God our greatness may not fail\nThrough craven fears of being\ngreat.\"\nThe member's creed is \"Believing\nthe British Empire i to stand for justice, freedom, order and good .government, wc pledge ourselves, as citizens\nof the greatest empire In the world,\nto maintain the heritage handed\ndown to us by our fathers.\"\nThose present at the meeting were:\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Wallace. Mr. and\nMrs. L.W. Wood, Mr. and Mrs. H.M.\nTarry, Mr. and Mrs. S. Holmes. Miss\nHardy, W. H. Horobin and Vi. E.\nShuttlewood.\nThut Col. Davis, who hus been appointed to the command ol the new\nMth Kootenay and Boundary regiment, which will be recruited exclusively for active service abroad, is\nexpected to visit Revelstoke within a\nfew days with thc object of recruiting\na Revelstoke company for the regiment was the announcement of R.F.\nCreen, M.P. for Kootenay who, accompanied by H.S. Clements, M.P.\ni.r Comox-Atlin arrived in thc city\non Thursday afternoon Irom the\nsouth and proceeded to the coast on\nNo. 1. Mr. Creen and Mr. Clements\nwere returning home Irom the session\nat Ottawa. i\nMr. Creen explained that the new\nregiment which will bc commanded hy\nCol. Davis would be recruited in\nICootsnay and Boundary, and perhaps Yale. It will not be a militia\niegiment, but will bc created tor\nactive service. II sufficient meen to\nform a company can bc en/listed in\nRevelstoke and vicinity thc Revelstoke company will be trained in the\ncity. Alter the companies have learn\ncd their drill they will be assembled\nat some central point for batfcit'.lou\ntruining. The otlicers will be selected\nso far as possible Irom the interior\nund the regiment will bear the name\nol thc Kootenay a.ncl Boundary, the\ncompanies being named from the\ncities or towns where they are enlisted. Mr. Creen believes that the regiment will be one ol the beBt that will\nsee service at th? tront and that its\nterritorial origin will create a splendid esprit de corps.\ni No definite date tor the Dominion\nelection had been unnounccd, said\nMr. Green, but he believes that the\nelection will take place at an early\ndate and he feels confident that the\nlesult will bc to return the Borden\n| government to power.\nSpeaking ot the session the member\nfor Kootenuy said that it had necessarily been devoted largely to matters iu connection with the war.\nSir Robert Borden's uncompromising attitude toward gratt had won\nwarm approval, declared Mr. Creqn.\nIt is Mr. Green's intention to re-\n. turn to Revelstoke In the near future\nI when he expects to spend some days\nin the city and vicinity.\nO. J. Wigen, the Wynndel rancher,\nis mentioned as a possible Conserve\ntive enndidnte in the forthcoming\nprovincial election.\nPioneer:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Two or three parties of\nmotorists have negotiated the trip\nbetween Grand Forl'.s irml- Phoenix,\nover the new road this year.\nEIGHTY-SIX\nTENDERFEET\nBoy Scouts to Have Uniforms\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Many Pass First\nExaminations\nINSPECTION\nBY MINISTER\nHon. Thomas Taylor Investiga\nting Public Works Requirements in Kootenay\ni city engineer Ramaay ciaima there\nare about MM Iteky tans in Fernie\nIwasting as much wafer per day as B\nI seven inch pipe c.e'.ibl bring int.. t ,\ncity.\ni'e tectl' e Bttli ae tre re>ported ta\nbeat the bottom of eom>' trouble\n| Hint is experienced in kr>l tons, Hewitt, Silverton,\nI lil tons; Lucky Jim, Zincton, X.i\ntons; Cork-Province, Kaslo, 40 tons;\nL. L. Retallack & Co., Whitewater,\n1G:i tons, and the Utica, 12 tons.\nTh.1 metal market continues to Improve, Zinc, copper, and silver ure\nhigher now then at any time since\ntin war w.,s declared. For many\nweeks the hiuli price for Bpelter, which\nstill maintains, haif been having a\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Vnost beneficial effect In the Ooeur\nd'Aleni i d British Columbia districts, /.ine mine operators are crowding !\u00E2\u0096\u00A0!\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' and increased divid\nends may h \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 expected, The advance In\nthe pric of copper haa caused muny\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.. arrange for increasing\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 it, the general impression\nt tht demand Ior \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 opper will\ntbe next lew\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - The Improved i audition ol\nnarket has i auMd a greal\n.'. for the b1 irea ol copper,\nnd stlver-li\n I\nJust when the great upwurd move-\nmeat in silver will come is really dependent upon the termination of the\nEuropean war, although it iB possible\nthat a moderate advance in the market may occur as the demand for\ncoinage purposes by European nations\nincreases(before peace is declared.\nThe Granite-Poorman gold property\nnear Nelson, has been bonded by O.\nV. Bob of Spokane, representing American investors, lt hus been held by\nthe late J.P. Swedburg and others on\nu lease and will be worked by the new\nholders at Khe expiration of this\nagreement, work will be continued.\nThe deal was put through by Mayor\nJ.J. Malone, of Nelson, liquidator of\nthe company owning tlie mine.\nIn the issue of the London Finan\ncial Times of March 25, thc last received in the city, Le Roi No. 2,\nLimited, stock is quoted at nine\nshilling. Ait the time the war l.ro'ie\nout and for a time after that, this\nstock was quoted as low as 4s Cd. to\n5s. 6il. The advance over this figure is\nvery considerable und Indicates a\nwholesome interest in the company,\nas well us a belief in its dividend-paying capabilities.\nKING EDWARD HOTEL\nH. J. MCSCRLEY FPCP.\nREVELSTOKE. B. C.\nStrictly First-Class\nRooms\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Sirgle, en Suite, and with Bath\nRevelstoke Wine and Spirit Co.. Ltd.\nImporters and Wholesale Dealers.\nManufacturers of Aerated Waters\nCIGARS\nWINES\nLIQUORS\nAgents for Calgary Beer\nJack Laughton, Proprietor First Street, Revelstoke, B. C.\nWINDSOR HOTEL\nEUROPEAN PLAN\nGOOD ACUOMMODATIOTJ kSONABLI KATRfl\n( All. IN ( O.VNEI TION\nSuitably furnishftd with the\nChoicest thc market affords.\nORIENTAL\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Ll/\"^ I EI Best Wines, Liquori and\nI \mJ LL L Cigars. Rates SI a day.\nJ. Albert Stone, Proprelor Mnn,h,v rate8-\nProbably owing to the business de-\nI ression nnd the difficulty ol making\nmonev In other ways, there have been\nmany applications ol late tor placer\ngold mining rights alone: the North\nSaskatchewan river in the Edmonton\ndistrict. As the sands nre known to\ncontain gold in sufficient (\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0uantit'V to\nmake the operation faiily remunerative, thc government is Issuing 10\nloot licenses for one dollar, but re\nquires practically continuous opera\ntion to prevent cancellat on ol\nlicense.\nWATER ACT, 1914.\nBefore the Board of Investigation.\nIn the Matter of Streams flowing\nfrom the West and draining into\nUpper Arrow Lake und the Columbia Hiver between a point five\nmiles south-west ot Arrowhead and\na point three miles southwest of\nBurton;\nAnd in the Matter of Streams flowing from the East and draining into Upper Arrow Lake and the Columbia River between tho Southern\nline of Lot 2U0 Galena Bay and a\npoint tive miles south of Burton;\nA meeting of the Hoard of Investigation w.H he held at the Courthouse at Nakusp on the lilst day of\nMay, 1915, at one o'cloct in the afternoon.\nnay District, by reason of a notice\npublished in the B. C. Gazette on the\n27th of December, 1907, 'is cancelled,\nand that thc said Lot will be open,\nto entry by pre-emption on Tuesday.\nthe 16th day of June, at the hour ot\nnine o'clock in the forenoon. All applications must be niado at the office\nof the Government Agent, at Revelstoke, B. C.\nR. A. REN WICK\nDeputy Minister of Lands,\nliuimls Department, Victoria, B.C.\nl.'ith April, 1U15. JH\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nfor ti tmenl\n,t\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nTrull\n11 Mil\n,. 1\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nSonic splendid Buniples of ore were\nbrought to Grand Forks lust week,\ntaken from Gloster claim in Franklin\ncamp, owned by T. Newby and ot\nbers. it is claimed the rock runs\nabout 23 ber cent, in copper and also\ncarries considerable values in silver,\nlt assays about $60 to the ton. The\ntunnel from which the ore is taken is\nin '.in feet and is now about 111 feet\ninto a body cf ore the ledge being\nabout four feet In width by si\ leet in\ndepth .md dipping, Those who have\nseen the ore are most enthusiastic\nover it and claim the Gloster will be\na big property.\nFriday w.is Lucky Jim day on the\nSpokane exchange, 1 tender for a less amount than\n<'e ' for any one claim will not be\nonsldered,\nTonders must le tealed, .'ind plainly indorsed on the outside \"Tenders\n..I Reverted Mineral Claltni.\"\nROBT. GORDON,\nvssst.mt Commissioner of Lands\nCourt House, Revelstoke, B. C,\nApril i.Mh. 1915. My-ir>.'\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL MINING\nREGULATIONS.\nCoal mining rights of the Dominion\nin Manitoba, Suskutchewau and Al-\nlertu, the Yukon Territory, tb*\nNorth-west Territories aud in a portion of the Province ol mumh Oo-\noiiiiiii.-i, muy be issued for a term of\ni wcni y one years ut uu annual renewal of ,1 au acre. Not iin.ro thnn\ni.'.iui acres will be leased to one applicant.\nApplication for lease must be mad*\ni.y the upplicuut in pci&uu to u>\u00C2\u00AB\nAgent or Sub-Agent ol the district\niu which the rights uppiied for art\nsituated.\nThe lease will include tbe coul mining rights ouly, but tbe leessee may\nne permitted to purchase whatever\niiV.iilHi.li' surfuce rights may be con-\nHdercd necessary for tbe working of\ntue mine at the rate of tflu.tM) an\nacre.\nin surveyed territory tbe land must\nte described by sections, or legal\nsub divisions of sectiouB, and in unsurveyed territory tho tract uppiied\nfor shull he staked out ny tbe up-\nI Ilea lit himself.\nEuch npplication must be accompanied by a fee of $5 which will be re-\niiindcd if thc rights applied for are\nnot avuilable, but not otherwise. A\nroyalty shull he puid on the n.er\nthuntable output of the mine ut the\nrate ol nve cents per ton.\nTbe person operating the mine shall\nfurnish tbe Agent witb sworn returns\naccount in;; for tbe full quantity ol\nmerchantable coal mined and pay tbs\niowilly thereon If the coal mining\nrights are not being operated, such\nleturns should be furnished at least\n1 once a year.\nFor full Information application\nshould he made to tbe Secretary of\nthe Department of tbe Interior, Ottawa, or to the Agent or Bub-Agent\no( Dominion Lands.\nW. W. CORY.\nRevelstoke Lo(lf;e\n1 \\u00C2\u00A3'Sti~\nyr>M\nNo. 1U85\nV&jr '\n\mm*P^\\nLOYAL ORDER\nl^nS:\nmil\nOK MOOsK\nK.mm'mKM\nMeets every second\n^^1\np^\nand Fourth Tuesday\nin the Selkil k Hull.\nVisiting\nitivti\ncen are cordially In-\nviied.\nHr. MuLEAN, Die\n11. 1.\nhi AUG, Sec.\nH. W. EDWARDS\nTaxidermist.\nBear Rugs Mounted. Furs cleaned\nand Dressed.\n85 Second St., Revelstoke, B. C.\nGOLD RANGF. LODGE, No. Z.\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS\nMeats every Wednesday evening\nat S o'clock, in Selkirk Hall.\nVisiting brothers cordially invited.\nR. GORDON, C. C.\nSELKIRK LODGE No. 12\nI. O. O. F.\nMeets every Thursduy evening tn '\nSelkirk Hull ut 8 o'clock. Visiting bretbern cordially invited.\nR. MILLER, N. G.\nJAMBS MATHIE. Secretary.\nKOOTENAY LODGE, No. 16.\nA. F. and A. M.\nRegular Meetings are held in\nNew Musonic Hall on the Fourth\nMonday in each month at 8 p.m.\nVisiting brethren are cordially\nwelcome.\nJOHN' LEE, W. M.\nROBT. GORDON, Secretary\nNOTICE OF CANCELLATION OF\nRBBBKVE\nNOTICE ie hereby given that the\nreserve existing on Lot 7926, Koote-\n1H\u00C2\u00AE il Sdlt SHBlSBHHliS\nfej M\n(a All changes of advertlee- a\nSI ments must positively be \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n.. handed into this office by \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n. Monday evening ln order that .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0;\nd the change shall appear in g\n! S Wednesday's Issue, and any liaj,\n{ [fj changes Intended for Satur- M\n, gj day'e Issue must be handed in [9|\n1 '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 not later than Thursday Jl\nB evening of each week. ,'rf\nfl \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nwSBSSHBHSSBSiSll'jfjl SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1915.\nTHE MAIL-HERALD.REVELSTOKE\npAoa THitm.\nWhat is Doing in the Province\nThe lake at Moyie is clear of ice.\ncigar\nL. X. Truxlur has started a\nfactory at Grand Forks.\nApricot trees are in blossom\n| some points in the Okanagnn.\nat\nArmstrong ranchers are going\nheavily into early potatoes this year.\nThe Enderby Egg Circle handled\n1,113' dozen eggs for the month of\nMarch.\nFour hundred men are working iu\nthe Qranby mines at Phoenix, 300 of\nthem are foreigners.\nI\nThe campaign is warming up at\nElko, The Conservatives have opened\na committee room.\nFernie will spend $15 on seeds and\nihriihs to beautify the grounds\naround the city hall.\nOutdoor rhubarb is being harvested\nat Waneta.\nN'rail merchants started the Wednesday half holiday last week.\nPenticton needs a new jail. The\nI.resent structure will only accommodate two prisoners.\nL. X.. Truxlor has. moved from Vernon to Grand Forks and will start a\ncigar factory in the latter city.\nfine hundred and fifty men in the\nKootenays are awaiting the call foe\nrecruits for the third contingent.\n| The Canadian Pacific railway .'will\nchange the boat service into Kaslo.\n! Instead of a noon boat in and out\nthe stcani\"r will leave Kaslo at 7\na.m. and return about 8 p.m. from\ni Nelson.\nDucks, per lb 25\nSUGAR\nGranulated B. C. Cane\nWO Ib. sack $8.50\nLump sugar, 2 lbs. ... 30\nGran. B.C. 20 1b. sack 1.75\nBrown sugar, 3tbs .25\nSyrup, maple, bottle .60\nSyrup, gallon l.75@ll.00\nHoney, comb, per 11) .30\nHoney, Ub. jars 25@ .35\nFLOUR\nRobin Hood 2.25\nU. & K. Bread Flour 2.18\nFive Roses 2.-\">\nLake of the Woods, bag 2.2S\nRoyal Household 2.J5\nPurity Flour, 2.2.'.\n' King's Quality 2.2;,\nDAIRT PRODUCTS\nButter, creamery, lb M t\u00C2\u00A7 J&\nButter, dairy, per tb 32\u00C2\u00AE .3.\")\nNew Zealand 45\n. .'heese, Canadian, per tb. ,25\n| ,'hccso, Can. Stilton, lb, .30\nl 'heese, Imp. Stilton, lb. .60\nl'Iggs, local new laid, doz, .-VI to .80\nPallets\nREALLY DELIGHTFUL\nTHE DAINTY\nMINT-COVERED\nCANDY-COATED\nCHEWING GUM\nCorner\nPackage\nA freak in apiculture showed itself\namong !\u00E2\u0080\u00A2). Norman's bees at Mirror\n[Lake on Tuesday when a smull colony\nof hoes sent out a fresh swarm with\nEnderby board of trade had a paid- :M lh\u00C2\u00B0 characteristics except size, of\nup membership of M last year. The ,!l\u00C2\u00B0 larger and usual swarms in June\ncity council voted them 2500. fT July-\nCustoms receipts at Grand Forks\nfor March are ^I0P higher than the\nsame month Inst year.\nVEGETABLES\nI'arsley, per bunch \t\nDry, onions, 5 lbs. for\nCabbage, locul, each ...\nN'ew Potatoes, lb\t\njettuce, lb\t\nFreight rates on the Kettle Valley\nrailway have been cut seven cents per\nhundred pounds between Port Hill and\nKonners Ferry.\nREVELSTOKE RETAIL\nPRODUCE MARKET\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A04T ejriolMWOUO * fcllJtSWOOft *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 r*\nMADAME CALVE GIVES CONCERT IN AMERICA TO AID\nLAFAYETTE FUND AND FRfcNCH K*.U ^KOS.s\nMadame Emma Calve, greatest of all Curmens, and famous the world\n-over where grand opera is sung and patronized, is a patriot in the true\nsense of the word\u00E2\u0080\u0094a lover I of her country. And she has done all in her\npower and is still devoting a good deal ot her time to relieve the suffering\nof the men who are Bghting to defend her native country, rfhe is an enthusiastic supporter of the Lafayette Fund, tain organization which is sending comfort kits of warm clothing to thi> French soldiers in the trenches.\nTo swtfll the funds of the Lafayette Committee and thu French Red Cross,\nMadame Calve recently gave a public song recital, which included some ol\nher best numbers of \"Carmen\" as wi 11 as other songs of her own selection\nThis was a notable event as Madame Calve has not l.ec.i heard in America\nfor a number of yenrs.\nTwenty Trail young people made\n120 triangular bandages for tbe Red\nCross Society at a sewing party on ,Bananas, per doz....\nSaturday last.\nRossland hens are producing about\n-,.\">!M) dozen eggs per month at present. The average price for the year\nis 45c. a dozen.\nGolden has now a continuous weekday telephone service Irom 7.30 a.m.\nFRUITS\nGrape Iruit Cal. 10c; Flor. 15c.\n 40& .50\nLemons, per doz 25\nApples, new, 4 to (libs. .25\nOranges, navel, from 25 to .\"rt\n\'avel Oranges 50\nFigs, cooking, ^Ibs. for .25\nDates, Hallow! 2 tbs. for .25\nDates, Fard, 2lbs. for ... .35\nDates, Dromedary, pkg. .15, 2 for .2.\")\nto in.30 p.m. also a short service of I Walnuts, California, per tb.\ntwo hours on Sunday mornings and i Walnuts, Grenoble\t\nevenings. I Pecans, per lb\t\n'Filberts, per 11)\t\nThe quite heavy froat in the earty Almonds, per lb\t\nhours of Friday morning lust caused Brazils, per lb\t\n.35\n.2:>\n.35\n.25\n.25\n.25\nsome uneasiness regarding the safety\nMEATS\nWINNING A DECORATION.\nt\"h\u00C2\u00BB Tradesman Got tha Grand Cross\nand King Peter tha Reward.\nAn excellent story ls going the\nrounds about King Peter of Servia.\nA French tradesman wbo had amassed a grent fortune wanted very badly\nto get hold of some decoration to wear\nan his breast, and after some financial\nmaneuvering he managed to secure a\nServian cross of something or otber.\nHe was immensely proud of this cross,\nand Instead of having It set with the\nusual inferior quality of brilliants he\nhad lt set with diamonds of tbe first\nwater.\nSoon afterward be visited Servlea,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd. as In duty bound, be called on\nKing Peter to thank bim for tbe order.\nHe wore, of course, his magnificent\ncross, and King Peter, who knows\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0something about Jewels, immediately\nfixed his eyes on It He himself was\nwearing the grand cross of tbe order\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2et with rather poor brilliants, and\nthe moment his visitor cakie within\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2each he exclaimed: \"But what is\nthis? I gave orders that you should\nhnve the grand cress. Tbe cross alone\nla not worthy of you. Here, yon shall\nwear mine.\"\nBefore tbe otter could protest Peter\nhad changed tbe cross for tbe grand\ncross, substituting tbe Inferior Jewels\nCor the splendid diamonds on tha\nbreast of the otherl As a matter of\nfact, of course, be had never heard ot\ndis visitor before, the decoration having been arranged by bis ministers.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLondon Tatler.\nDEADLY GUNCOTTON.\nof the peach crop. Enq.ulry of W.A. Fresh killed beef, retail .05\u00C2\u00AE.271\nLease, who has about the most peach I Pork' retail 13\u00C2\u00AE -Z-\nKi-\nCharacteristics of This Terrible\nplosive of Warfare.\nMany and odd are the materials done the buds not\ntrees in the valley, elicited'the infor-\nSQUARE OF THE CIRCLE.\nFor All Ordinary Mechanical Work tha\nFormula 3.1416 Is Used.\nTlie ratio of tbe length of the circumference of a circle to Its din meter,\nsought during vany thousands of\nyears, has never been discovered. It\nhas been known for decades of centuries, away back to the Aryans and to\nthe Egyptians\u00E2\u0080\u0094or rather to the non-\nEgyptian pyramid of Supbls builders\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthat tbe circumference of a circle is\nthree and a fraction times longer than\nIts diameter.\nThis fraction has been sought by\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0computers lu every great nation from\nprehistoric times. Within modern\ntimes lt has been computed with accuracy and by enormous labor ln Germa\nny out to G35 decimal places with no\nend\u00E2\u0080\u0094there Is always a remainder to\nbe reckoned.\nBut all of this work wits useless, be-\ncauso high mathematics has shown\nthat the string of figures will never\ncomo to an end in any finite number of\nfigures. And ns these men cannot\nthink of Infinity they made the symbol of inllnlty and stopped wasting\ntime mnny years ngo.\nThe circumference of e circle Is\n8.141502(15 plus longer thun Its diameter. But In all ordinary mechanics, as\nIn fsctorlus, machine shops and the\nlike, the number 3 141(1 ts used Thus\nthe difference between length* \"f otr-\ncumferenceSi of locotnotlts dciv. wbMls\nor any other IDS.de by us nil ul lhe\notber of these values co'ild not tie detected mechanically without mlcromot-\nrlc measurement. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 New Vork A inert\nen ll.\nentering into the manufacture of\nmodern explosives, but perhaps the\nmost Interesting of all these el.9-\nments of destruction as well as the\nsimplest is guncotton. The gun-\ncotton manufacturing industry la\nlarge, as enormous quantities are\nused in tbe charging of torpedoes\nand for similar purposes.\nThe base of guncotton is pure raw\ncotton or even cotton waste, such as\nis used to clean machinery. This is\nsteeped in a solution of one part of\nnitric and three parts of sulphurlo\nacid. It Is the former ingredient tbat\nrenders the mass explosive, the sulphuric acid being used merely to\nabsorb all moisture, thus permitting\nthe nitric acid to combine more\nreadily with the cellulose of tbe\ncotton.\nAfter being soaked for several\nhours in the solution described the\ncotton is passed between rollers to\nexpel all nonabsorbed acid, a process\ncarried to completion by washing tbe\ncotton in clear water. This wasblng\nprocess is a long one, requiring machinery which reduces tke cotton to\na mass resembling paper pulp.\nShould any nonabsorbed acid be allowed to remain it would decompose\nthe cotton.\nIf the explosive is to be used after\nthe manner of powder It is still further pulverized and then thoroughly\ndried, but if Intended for torpedoes\nit is pressed Into cakes of various\nsimiles and sizes elisk shaped, cylindrical. Bat squares and cubes. Wh\u00C2\u00B0n\nnot compressed guncotton is very\nlight, as light as ordinary batting.\nA peculiar characteristic of tbis\nterrible explosive ti tbat \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 brick of\nIt v. Inn v 61 ma; be placed on a b-d\nof hot coals, and as the moisture\ndi e\u00C2\u00AB oul the i otton will ll >k tnd\ni i quietly. If dry orig nat'y, how.\n.. . the guncotton ill explode \" Ith\nlerrll le rorce al about \"J \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0! gr< ei\nT.f lee'.\nIn fi neral it i.< tl.e custom to explode gunedtton by detonation or an\nintense shock in- ead ol by heat. In\na torpedo the exploslvi cbargi Is wet,\nthis wei cotton being exploded by\nmeans of dry cotton in I tube, this\nhaving been tired I.y ;. cap Of fulminate of mercury, the cap itself having\nbeen Bred by the Impact of the torpedo against the target.\nBrigand*' Coffee.\nA traveler ln the wilder parts ot\nEurope where brigands still flourish\nonce told me that the best coffee ht\nhad ever tasted was made after a\nrecipe supplied by one of these gentry. The coffee berries are wrapped\nup ln a matxe leaf and placed ln hoi\nashes to roast. While hot the berries are bruised with stones and put\nInto a pot of fast boiling water,\nwhich Is held over the Are Ave mln*\nntes. The fragrant beverage ls now\npoured Into a pitcher, at the bottom\nof which a lump of honey has been\nplared. and Is drunk forthwith. II\nIs delicious. The quantity of berries'\npu. Into tbe pot in regulated according to the strength of the coffee ro\ntuired.\ntlutton. retail 12i@ .25\njveal, retail 13J@ .27\nHams, retail 25\u00C2\u00AE ,81'\nbeing sufficiently Bacon, retail 28\u00C2\u00AE .40\nfar advanced to suffer. Andy Strahl, Lard, retail . 17rii .2n\nwho is experimenting with apricots, chicken, retail 22\u00C2\u00AE .25\nstates that even this very early fruit Sausages, retail 12J@ .15\nwns in no way damaged either.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Turkey, per lb 28\nCreston Review. j 3eese. per lb .25\nTomatoes, tb .15\nNew Carrots, tb .02J\nTurnips, per lb .Olfc\nCelery, per lb 15\nFEED\nBrun, ton $36.00\n.05 I Wheat, ton, 55.no\n.28 Oats, ton 50.00\n.05(3 .10 Barley, ton 50.0<>\n.02 Hay, ton 20.00\n.ln.i .15 I Shorts, ton 45.00\nT\nkHESE are times when every\ndollar of British Columbians is needed in British\nColumbia.\nWhen you buy foreign-made shoes a very large\npercentage of the amount you pay leaves the\nProvince permanently.\nLECKIE SHOES\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094the best the market affords\u00E2\u0080\u0094are made in British\nColumbia by British Columbians. When you buy\nLECKIE SHOES every penny of your dollar\nremains right here at home. Remember that!\nSOLD AT LEADING DEALERS\n\"BUILT FOR WEAR. STYLE AND COMFORT\"\nThe Losing Side of the oMail\nOrder Trading\nFarmer Tells How by Sending Away for His Goods the\nValue of His Farm Depreciated $5,600 in Nine Years\nBecause He and Others Were Not Alive to the Necessity\nof Building Up the Home Town.\nA CERTAIN farmer in Iowa has\ndiscovered that the benefits\nwhich appear on tbc surfuce as\nattaching to the mail order plan\nsometimes spell disaster and has\nwritten a very interesting story of\nhis views in a certain farm paper.\nHere is a part of his story:\n\"Wo farmers need awakening to the\nfact that we have unmistukn/bly reach\ned the period where wo must think\nand plan. I am ono ol the slow farmers that had to be shown, and I\nam now giving my experience that\nothers may profit, for knowledge is\nmore expensive now than ten years\nago.\n\"Twenty-nine years ago I began\nmy farm career. I had an old team\nand $50. Our furniture was mostly\nhome-made\u00E2\u0080\u0094chairs, cupboard and\nlounge made from dry goodB boxes,\nneatly covered with ten-cent cretonne\nby my girl wife. We rented eighty\nucres. Being a hoy of good habits I\ngot (II needed machinery and groceries of our home merchants on\ncredit, until fall crops were Bold. The\ntirst year was a wet season and I did\ni ot iSake enough to pay ereditors. I\nwent tn each on date of promise nnd\nexplained conditions, paying us much\nas possible, and they all carried the\nbalance over another yeur. They continued to accommodate me until I\nwas able to buy a forty-acre piece of\nmy own.\n\"As soon as I owned these few\nacres the mail order houses began\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0sending me catalogues, and gradually I began sending my loose change\nto them, letting my accounts stand\nin my home town where 1 had gotton\nmy accommodation when I needed it.\n\"We then had ono of the thriftiest\nlittle villages in thc Btate\u00E2\u0080\u0094good line\nof business in all the branches, merchants who were willing to help an\nhonest lollow over a had year, and a\ntown full of people who came twice\nn week to trade and visit. Our little\ncountry towtti supported a library,\nhigh school, band, ball team, and We\nhad big celebrations every year.\n\"A farm near a 'live town soon\ndoubles in value. I sold my\nforty acres at a big advance and\nbought nn eighty, gradually adding\nto it until T hnd 200 acres of tlm best\nland in Iowa. I then felt no need of\nasking favors, nnd found It easy tn\npntrionlze the mail order aeents thnt\nenme nlmnst weekly to our door. T\nregret to say that T was tbe flrst in\nthe country tn make up n nelghbor-\nhnnd bill and send It to n mnll order\nbouse. Thoiieh we got bitten every\nonce in a while, we got in the habit\nof sending away for stuff.\n\"Gradually our merchants lessened\ntheir stock ol goods\u00E2\u0080\u0094for lac't of patronage Finally ere began to realise\nthat when we needed a holt quickly\nfor machinery, or clothing for sickness or death, we had to trait and\nBend away for it. which wasn't so\npleasant, One hy one our merchants\ni,ovc.1 to places where they wot* appreciated, and men o( leas energy\nmoved In. Gradually our town, has\ngone down; our busin.\nApplications for Transfer of Liquor\nLicenses $7..M).\nOil prospecting notices $7.50.\nLand Purchase Notices, 87.00,\nWater Application Notices, up to\n10D words, $7.50, over 100 words in\nproportion.\n\n3ntcrloc BMibltelMng Company\nLIMITED\nE. G. ROOKE. Manager and Editor.\nIATURBAY, AI'IUL 24, 1915.\nfrom his place in the House of Commons.\n\"One thing we may be certain of is\nthat if there is corruption in the Conservative party it does not exist with\nthe approval of the Prime Minister.\"\nHis tribute is well 'deserved and will\nbe endorsed hy many LiberalB, but\nMr. Martin is the only prominent\nmember of the Liberal party who\nhas given utterance to sucn\sentiments, others, less .independent than\nhe, refrain from commendation leBt\nthey might seem hy, inference to condemn Sir Wilfrid Laurier, whose attitude, when in power, toward graft\nin the Liberal party and, even now,\ntoward Mr. Frank Oliver's startling\nindiscretions, is in strong contrast bo\nthe uncompromising attitude of the\nConservat Ive premier.\nIf Dr. Sutherland's character has\nleen \"hi'smcatchd\" that operation\nhas been performed'by no one hut the\nReview, lt was the Review alone\nwinch contended that transactions\nwith the government, such as those\nIn which, according to the public\naccounts, Dr, Sutherland received\nhundreds of .dollars of the public\nluniis, were to he described aB putting\none's snout in the trough of public\nexpenditure.\nland and his friends obtain sustenance from ii source which he appears\nto regard with imuch contempt. The\nMail Herald certainly did not support the Review'B idea that to supply at a fair price either labor or\nmaterial required by the province for\npublic works was a questionable proceeding, nor1 did it contend that Dr.\nSutherland had failed to honestly earn\nthe substantial fees be received. Nevertheless the Review groundlcssly\ncomplains that the Ma.i.-Herald scek,B\nto \"hesmearch\" Dr. Sutherland's\ncharacter, and is at great pains to\nconvey the impression that Dr. Sutherland's charges were not \"excessive\nfor the class of service rendered.\"\nProbably no one but the Review lm-\nMETHOD1ST CHUROH\nPublic Set vice will he held on Sunday at 11 a.m. and 7.1)1) p.m. to\n^^^^^^^ which the stranger and man from\nagtned that its tactless delence ol , home ia alwayB welcome. At 2.30\nDr. .Sutherland's conduct was at all | Sunday School and Bible Classes.\nConfessions Saturday 4 to 6 and 7:30\nto 9 p.m. and Sunday morning 7:30\nto 8. Weeks days:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mass every morning at 7 o'clock, Confessions before\nMass. First Fridays \u00E2\u0080\u0094Mass ac 8 a.\nm., Benediction and Rosary at 7:110\np. m.\nST. PETER'S\nThird Sunday after Fluster: 8 a.m.\nHoly Communion; ll a. m. Matins\nEvensong 7.30 p.m. Sermons at both\nservices hy tho rector. At\nboth morning and evening prayer,\nprayers authorized by the Lord Bishop tor war will be said. Sunday\nschool at 2.f!0 p.m.\nNOTICE:\nVOTERS OBJECTED TO BY LIBERAL ASSOCIATION\nThe Court of Revision for the Provincial Voters' List will be\nheld in the Court House on May 17th, at 10 o'clock.\nThe Liberal Association has filed objections tothe below List of\nnames and the Conservative Association would request any of the\nparlies to call at the Conservative Committee Rooms, or write\na letter to the Secretary of the Association and forms will be\nprovided them to have their names retained on the list. Electors\nwhose names have been objected to can appear personally before-\nthe Court of Revision and see that their franchise is protected.\nnecessary.\nIROM THE SANCTUMS\nEpworth League fur young people, on\nMonday at 8 p.m. Prayer Meeting,\nWednesday, at 8 p.m. Choir practice,\nFriday, at S p.m.\nAN UNTIMELY END\nThe Vancouver livening Journal in\nits untimely end will he \"unwept,\nunhonor'd and unsung\" hy the\n\"Kelly graft\" and by some of tbe\n\"so called leaders\" of the Liberal\nI arty but, brief as was its career,\nHon. Joseph Martin's newspaper had\nwon for Itself a distinct place in the\njournalism ol British Columbia, a\nplace which can he lilied by no paper\nwhich docs noi answer l'i Mr, Martin's guiding band. Its mission Wa8:\n\"To tell men freelj of their faintest faults.\n\"To laugh it tbeir vain deeds, and\nvainer thoughts.\"\nand verj thoroughly did it accomplish its object. As a\nnewspapei it had its limitations, but\nits breezy pages were never lacking\n::i interest und its meaning was usually unmistakable, iif the Bvraing\n1. lurnal it '-ould not be said that it;\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Must Borne half-meaning half dis\n\"And utter neither truth nor lies.\nThe revi lations made i.y the Jour\nl'-al of si of Ihe priivincial Lttier\nal party were particularly entertain\ning. If Mr, Martin did nothing els.'.\nhe can at lenst claim credil li i\ning the \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 and Bli 'if the Llbi I al\n; arty reliable it is to thi\nmethods o! the inner circle\nthat guides its dest ,n i s, i nd\nI ointing a way by winch a pai\nfound out of the wilderness. ll\n. id \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 vi i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 cle .r thi \u00C2\u00BB eakni bbi -\nworse, I 1 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ni \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nrs those crll - \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n' ' '.at in many Inst\nts\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n-\nmal, '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' ri\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ..\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0- tal occuf\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ,. -\nilorden -\nThe Winnipeg Free Press, the leading Liberal newspaper of Manitoba\nsays:\nSir Robert Borden's censure ennnot\nbut bave a good effect on public life-\nHe spoke strongly and indignantly,\nbis speech breathing a high spirit of\npublic responsibility and the patriotic duty of service which should make\nevery Canadian acquit himself honestly and honorably aud in. every way\nworthy the name of Canadian in this\ntime of national and individual dis-\nciplino and testing of character.\"\nThe Hamilton Herald is, as is well\nknown, not a party iiaper in any\nBonse. No Canudlan dai!l\ has a better claim to be classed as independent\nin its judgment, hut it has this tn\nsay regarding recent revelations at\ni ittawu:\nAs for Ml. Ullver.il it.be true that\nhe, while serving the country as minister ol the interior, got possession\nol wcstei n land in the manner des\ncrihed b> i'i Roche, Ins career as a\npublic mni in tins country should be\ncosed it once. No man with a work\nuble sense* ol honor could have done\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '. n! having\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nSir Roberts'\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n1 graft\n- -. .: :.\nlent \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'. it ..:\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nCtol I\n\"i ine of I\nlada is tbat\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 it down,\n\"It is verj\na graft in the govei\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 if the day. I ine ot re inn'' to\ne s patriot te. taki 11 at Btand.\n\"It does, however. i c ,iiii.\nil. im an I coo honest \u00E2\u0096\u00A0.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'. speak ae Sii Roi ort has jusl A rn\nTHK JU; IS l'i' THEN\nHouston Post: Wlv n a lady finds\nout she can make a speech, the hus-\nhuAul may as well put the chJidren in\na boarding school, strangle the canary bird and renew his acquaintance\nwith the fellows at the club.\nTHK CHARGE THK THING\nEdmonton Journal: Hon. Frank\nOliver uind his defenders have adopted\nthe familiar practice of impugning the\nmotives of those making the charges\nagainst bim. This is an admission of\ngreat weakness. A num who has an\nadequate defence meets accusations on\ntheir merits. The public, moreover, is\nvery little concerned about , whut\nprompts an attack on a politician.\nThe question on which It concentrates\nitB attention is whether thq allegations are well founded or not.\nTO YOUNG MEN\nVictoria-.Colonist: Some time ago\na local contemporary had a letter in\nwhich the writer urged poling inei, to\ntake more active part in public, affairs than has been their custom m\nthis community. This was excellent\nadvice and we hope it will he heeded.\nIt is just as much the patriotic duty\nof young men to come, to tbc trout in\npublic affairs at home as it is to conn'\nto the front against the enemy in the\nfield. The West is a yftung man's\ncountry and young men oQgbt to take\na part m governing it. It may bc\nmentioned In pawing that Metbusaleh\nhas no near rivals m the present provincial administration.\nOLIVER MUST RESIGN\nVictoria Colonist The cases under\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>!. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2ouch the personal Lnteg\nnt; if an \"\ minister ol the Crown\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.ho still holds ,i seat in parliament.\nAir Oliver's defence In the Hous \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\na uvea I tl ti where 11 stood and\nthe ch. i .swcre.l. Thc only ot-\nmember \u00C2\u00BBho .it tempted to\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i- Mr. WI .:..\nInister ..! public\n- lr Wilfrid Laurier a last\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nite Wi\n. .\n'\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n'\n...\nunite\n'\nTHIS It A I . .\nMr, Oiivi't\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n,t the\nPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH\nA.t the Presbyterian church next\nSunday morning there will be a communion service and in the evening the\n\"I.O.O.F.\" and thc \"Hehekahs\" will\nattend service is a body, and the\nminister Hev. J. W. Stevenson, will\ne take us his subject \"The Good Samaritan.\" Sunday school Bible classes\nat 2.30.\nThe Young Peoples society will\nmeet on Tuesday at 8' p.m. and the\nmeeting will take tbe form of \"A\nNight With Canadian Poets.\" Prayer\nmeeting will he held on Wednesday\nnight.\nAT THE THEATRES\nThe Famous Players production will\n' he seen ut the Kmpress theuti't'vevery\nTuesday and Thursday. Tonight \"The\nGhost of Smiling Jim\" and \"Animated Weekly\" will ha the principal pictures, (in Monday night another of\nthe \"Terrence O'Rourke\" series will\nhe shown.\nGLAC1EK\n1\nGlacier; 13. C, April E3.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Thomas\nSbaw is tuning a well earned rest at\nthe coast cities. L'p to this year he\nalways spent his vacation in the east.\nTin snow-piow has cut a road\nthrough thc snow slide on the summer trucK quite easily this year.\nOf bright sunny days, Glacier has\ntbe hest and tlie bowers are in lull\nbloom.\nMr. Clarke bus relinquished his\nduties as night clerk at the hotel and\niti attending to the lawn, handing the\nlantern, pen and keys to his successor,\nAlbert Webb has returned home\nIrom the coast cities.\nMr. Brown has taken over, Mr.\nShaw's duties at the depot during the\nhitter's absence at the coast.\nGus Gold was a v.sitor on Sunday.\nAlbert Tlnce Conegan was also on a\n\isit.\nProvincial Constable, Gallaghei \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2!\nGold ai wason Wednesday's train. He\nalways steps to thc platform here to\nview the scenery.\nMr. Grosse, manager of the local\nbank spent th\" wcck end at Revel\n.-fokc.\nchas Deutchman the popular guide\n.t tho caves lett on Friday lor the\nmpanied by A. Thome and\nWilliam Harding.\nike hall, arrived at the hotel this\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .ck t -i't tbc carpenter work\nft things on the coast arc\n'all.\n1\nMAGIC \u00C2\u00AB*\"\u00E2\u0084\u00A2E\nNO BAKING\"\"1\ne\mm POWDER\nIIC P..'\n|\n'\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' li\" ll \"\n,llld |e'e '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' , till .<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ntic ii inoill t UP I era in\nthe tro gtt of pub\n'i ia- M.iii I li raid '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0,! ired tr, point\n. ,i thai t be three chiel mippoi I\nHr. Sutherland's candidature are n\ngovernment officials, that the inst.\nvolume \"f tiic public a Kven\nto !\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 :.vi\nSkates - 25c\nDarker, Donald W.; Policcmmn, Revel-\nstoke.\nbarker, John; School! Teacher, RevelBtoke.\nBamea, Henry; Car Repuirer, Revelstoke. \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBarraclough, Karl; Laundryman, Reel velstoke.\nButchi'lor, Willium 10.; Restaurant\nProprietor, RevelBtoke.\nBlair, William, Butcher, RevelBtoke\nBraganola, Augusto. Boilermaker's\nhelper, Revelstoke.\nBrand, David Win ton, Machinist, Revelstoke.\nBrophy, Martin J.; Bridgeman, Revelstoke.\nBryant, Sam I..; Agent, Revelstoke\nBuchanan. John; Miner, Revelstoke\nBuck, Wulter Mauspeld; Clerk, Revelstoke,\nCameron, Willium S.; Painter, Revelstoke.\nCampbel, Walter B.; Rancher, Re-\n1 velstoke.\nCampbell, Walter K.; Farmer, 21\nMile Board.\nCash, Wa'lter G.; Brakeman, Revelstoke.\nCristiano, Guiseppe; C.P.R. Helper,\nRevelstoke\nCummlng, W.; Brakeman, Revelstoke\nDivvies, William; Bridgeman,, Revelstoke.\nDavis, James; Fireman, Glacier.\nEskridgO, Grover; Brakeman, Revelstoke.\nEvans, George A.' Bartender, Revelstoke.\n' Evans, Tom Edward; Waiter, Glacier\nB'airfield, Joseph J.; Filer, Revelstoke\nFairfield, Victor; Filer, Comaplix.\nFoogood, Charles. Butcher, Glacier.\nForde, John P.; Civil Engineer, Revelstoke.\nFraser, Duncan R.; Sawyer. Comaplix\nFraser, James, Woodman, Beaton.\n!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2! user, William; Baker Glacier.\nFritz, Frank H.; Painter, Revelstoke.\nGanzini, Richard; Laborer, Revelstoke\nGarvnn, Adam, Trapper, Revelstoke.\nGiflord, Percy; Waiter, Glacier.\nGiflord, Percy F.; Physical Director,\nRevelstoke.\nGilchrist, William; Butcher, Arrowhead.\nGillis, Alexander J.; Bridgeman, Revelstoke.\nGtguere, Joseph A.; Operator, Revelstoke.\nGoodfellow, Stewart; Clerk, Revelstoke.\nGorotalo, Santo. Helper, Revelstoke.\n('.rant. George; Machinist, Glacier.\nCreen, William; Lumberman, Revelstoke.\nHarris, Reg. W. D.; Engineer, Revelstoke.\nHarvey, Charles; Carpenter, RevelBtoke.\nHammond, Lenson H.; Luml erman,\n'.l Mile Camp.\nililm.'i'i, Charles, Teamster. Revelstoke.\n.' mini\", lohn K.; Carpenter, Glacier\n.Inns n. Jos'ph K.J Publisher, Revelstoke.\nJohnston Robert E., Laborer, Beaton\n.'ones. \V .1.: Brakeman, Revelstoke.\nKerrigan, Martin Bartender, Revelstoke.\nKirkpatrick, Robert A.; Engineer, eRe-.\nvelstoke.\nKohnc, Joseph 0.; Trapper, Cambora*\nLoader, Thomas Henry; l)raiightmana\nGlacier.\nLogan, Chipman, Luborer, Revelstoi\nLaugheud, George B.; Plumber, Revelstoke.\nLee, Arthur; Laborer, Revelstoke.\nMaclsaac, Archie; Trainman, ReveeJ-.\nstoke.\nMacDonnld, John; Bridgeman, Rev.tl-\nstoke.\nMacDonald, John Malcolm; Bridge-\nman, Revelstoke.\nMacDearmld, Garfield; Bridgeman..\nRevelstoke.\nManown, John; Machinist, Glucier.\nMillar, George; Trapper, Camborne\nMiller, Henry, Teamster Revelstoke.\nMornsey, Joseph W.; Uridgeman.\nRevelstoke. t\nMonteleoiie, James; Laborer, Revelstoke.\nMcBeth, Malcolm; Teumster, Arrowhead.\nMcDonald, Alexander H.; Purser, Arrowhead.\nMcDonald, John; Watchman, Glaciw.\nMcDonald, John C; Bridgeman, Revelstoke.\nMcEuchcrn, Wm. Joseph, Bridgeman.\nRevelstoke.\nMcGillivruy, Hugh J.; Bridgemaa,\nRevelstoke\nMcintosh, Walter J.; Laborer, Revelstoke.\nMclsaac, Michael, Trainman, Revelstoke.\nNicholls, Krnnk Albert; Clerk, Beaton\nNorth, William; Boilermuker, RevelBtoke.\nOgilvie, William, Railroadman, Re-\nvclstokc.\nPaterson, James; Bridgeman, Revelstoke.\nPatterson, Keith; Bookkeeper, Revelstoke.\nPatterson, R.A.; School teacher, Revolstoke.\nPearson, Alfred J.; Photographer, Revelstoke.\nPloyer, George; Bridgeman, Revelstoke.\nPooly, Thomas; Teamster, Revelstoke\nSanservino, John; Laborer, Revelstoke.\nSaviano, Emiliano, Labonr, Revelstoke.\nBcrutoo, Ralph G.J Journalist, Revelstoke.\nBcruton, Jess; Journalist, Revelstoke\nSmith, Robert T.: Machinist, Revelstoke.\nSmythe Dnncomble R., Soda-waterman, Revelstoke.\nSneddon, James; Boilermaker, Revelstoke.\nSteed, Hugh. Laborer, Revelstoke.\nTurnbull, Thomas; Timekeeper, Glacier.\nTurner. Francis B.; Bookkeeper, Comaplix.\nWebb, Albert; Engineer, Glacier.\nWestby, Nils N.; PI.merman, Revelstoke.\nWillis, Edward V.; Muil Clerk, Ar-\nrowhead.\nYoung, William O.J Caretaker, Revelst oke.\nI'. IK\nBRITIBH t'OLl mi:i \\nI, the n ttei ol\n\it,' at.'i\nia thc m ittei \"' o at ion bet ween\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 sd, a co i aitncr\n. Ing \"ii I' ISlOM nt Mcdi\ni mi- Hat. Ubelt ,. Plaintifl and\nJohn Baker, D!.t- (action at tb.. Court House.\nRevelstoke, B. C, on Monday, the\n10th da) of May, I'll',, at 10 ..'(h.ck\nin tin' morning to satisfy a\nJudgment of th\" above named plllill-\ntni against the ibove named defend\nant and foi rusts, ail uf the Interest\no' tbc above named defendant, John\nBaker in and' to the following land\nAll that certain parcel ot land\nsituate, lying and being in the [Cam-\nloops Division of Vale District, in\nthe Province if British Columbia, and\nbeing composed if a portion of the\nNorth-west Quartei of Section Three\nI iwnshtp Twentj . Range Ten,\nWest of tiic 6th Meridian, mon' par\nticularly described as follows 1st.\n1 ommeni nu- at a point of the Southern boundary of said Northwest\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. itei ,,f Bectlon Three B,:'.'.' chains\nfiom the South Salt corner of suid\nQuartei Section; thence in a Northerly direct i .n and parallel with thc\nSaltern boundary of the said Quarter\nSection 11.95 chalni; thence In a\nWesterly direction and parallel with\nthn Northern boundary ol the said\nQuarter section 8.SAB chains more or\n(ess to the Southern boundary of the\nroad nlfownnre; thence following the\nsaid Bouthirn boundary in a South\nwesterly direction 10.40 chains; thence,\nin a Southerly direction and parallel\nwith the West boundary of the said\nQuarter Section 25.MS chains more or\nless to the South boundary in an,\nEasterly direction 11.HI chains more-\nor le s t i point ol commencement.\ncontaining :;.' acres more or less and\n-'nil: Commencing at a point IH.475\n(bains from th\" Western boundary ot\nthe aforesaid Quarter Section and\n-.'ii chains from the Noi them boundary of the aforesaid Sertion; thence\nin an Easterly direction and parallel\nwith the said Northern boundary 3.70\nchains; thence In a Southerly direction nnd parallel with the Eastern\nboundary ot the Baid Quarter Section\n7.03 chains, more or less to the\nNorthern limit of the road allowance along the said Northern limit\nof a South Westerly direction, 4.39\nchains; thence in a Northerly direction and parallel with the Westerly\nlimit of the said Quarter section 9.17\nchains more or less to the point ot\ncommencement containing three acres\nmore or less.\nHichest or any bid not necessarily\naccepted.\nDated at Revelstoke, B. C. April\n20th, I91,r).\nWILLIAiM J. LAW\nSheriff of North-weBt Kootenay,, SATURDAY, AfRIb 24, 1915.\nTHE MAIL-HERALD. REVELSTOKE\nnoi rrm\n' e=\nWILL TRAIN\nIN INTERIOR\nCentral Training Ground For\nTroops Will be Selected in\nInterior of Province\nAu announcement ol greut interest\nto military circles was mude lust\nnight by Col Ogilive, D.O.C., in Victoria to the ellect that it ib luipi tillable thut coast cities will be depots Ior troops in training Ior Over-\naeaB service during thiB summer. Only garrison troops and the usuul re\ngtmental units will remain.\nA central training ground In the interior ol the province will be selected, and the 41th Battalion, training\nat Vancouver; tbe 4sth liattulion,\ntraining nt Victoria; the llth Cana\ndian Mounted Miles, training at New\nWestminster, and the(54th Battalion,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0now in progress ol organization in\nthe Kootenays, will be sent to this\ncentral depot, presumably so that\nlarger movements may be undertaken.\nIf the 2nd Canadian Mounted Rifles,\nnow training at Victoria, have not\nstone to the front at that time, the\nregiment will probably he moved to\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2the big camp nt Bewell, Manitoba,\nMention is not made ol the 2'Jth Battalion, Vancouver, as it is expected\nthat it will receive marching orders\nvery shortly.\nNo change will be, made in the arrangements for recruiting. The local\nregiments will continue to accept re-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0cruits for active Service and will draft\nthem, as occasion requires, into the\n'existing battalions. No information is*\ngiven of the mobilization ol new battalions in the three cities when the\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ones now here arc .sent to the central\ntraining grounds.\nThnt \"A\" Section, No. 1 Field Am-\nliulanre Depot, will leave Victoria (or\nHalifax, the port ol embarkation, today has been definitely decided. A\nspecial boat will be provided, to\nleave at 11.4.\" a in. Friday was \ori-\nI'inaliy the intended date of departure, but circumstances arose tha*\n'necessitated the postponement till\nSaturday.\nAdditional Contributions\nto Red Cross Society\nAt tho last two meetings ol the\nRed Cross society thc lollowing\npieces of work were handed in:\nMrs. Pagdin, I pairs socks.\nMrB. B.R. Atkins, 2 pair socks.\nMrs. R.I). Colpitts, '-\u00C2\u00BB shirts.\nMrs. Sibbald, 1 pair Bocks.\nMrs. Downs, 1 pair socks.\nMrs. Hogan, 1 pair socks.\nMrs. Bridge, 1 puir socks.\nMiss Gee, 1 helmet.\nMiss Dunlop, 2 pair sockB.\nMiss Rosemary Pratt, 2 handkerchiefs.\nMrs. Simmonds, ti knee caps.\nMrs. Chas. Austin, 1 pair socks.\nMrs. S. T. Hay, '.'. knee caps.\nMiss L. McKinnon, 2 knee caps.\nMrs. G. Rhodes, 2 pair Bocks.\n.Mrs. Geo. Ross, 1 pall socks.\nMrs. Leigh, 1 pair socks.\nMacDonald, I pair socks.\nA. MacRao, :'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 pairs socks.\nPratt, I pair socks.\nWells, :i pairs socks.\nW. Armstrong, l pair socks.\nHaggen, 2 knee caps.\nStanley Pearse, Monte Creek, 2\npairs socks.\nMrs. Blacklock, 1 pair socks.\nMrs. Geo. Kdwards, 2 pairs s'ickB.\nMrs. Palmer, 2 pairs socks.\nMrs. Towse, I pair socks.\nMrs. Kincaid, 2 pairs socks.\nln addition to the above, Mrs.\nPratt has donated 16 sets ol knitting\nneedles, and cut out 120. pairs of convalescent shoes and III shirts.\ndecoration day, May 24 being the date\nchosen. Those interested are asked to\nreport for duty armed with shovels\nand wheelbarrows. Teams und, a plow\nwill be lent for the occasion and it is\nhoped that, the cemetery lots which\nwere purchased for the town several\nyears ago will be put into a much\nmore respectable condition.\nThe program for the day consisted\nof a solo hy Miss R. Heimer and a\ntalk on \"Home Nursing Difficulties\"\nby Mrs. A. J. Grieg.\nCirculars and Pamphlets\nExempt From War Tax\nMrs.\nMrs.\nMrs.\nMrs.\nMrs.\nMiss\nMrs.\nlii* For Shipments\nof Red Cross Supplies\nCirculars ' and pamphlets seut\nthrough the post in unsealed envelop\nes are exempt from the war stamp\ntax.\nCirculars are delincd in the Postal\nGuide as follows:\n\"Circulars are communications in\nprint or prodllC d by a multiplying\nprocess easy to recognize, but not di-\ntect from a typewriting machine,\nwhich are issued in identical terms to\nseveral Individuals .. circular 1 .ay\nwithout becoming liable to a higher\n: ate of postage, have a written dab;\nand signature and may have the\nname 0! the addressee repeated in\nwriting inside. Reproductions of imitations of handwriting or typewritten matter, ur printed articles such\nas catalogues, etc., have words impressed on them by means of a hand\nstamp, in order to be accepted as\nprinting must be handed in at the\npostoffice wicV-et in a number not less\nthan 20 identical copies, separately\naddressed. Failure to com;'.y with\nthese conditions will subject the\narticle to letter rates of postage.\"\nPatriotic Fund in Need\nlighting With Australians:\nEgypt Queer Country\nThe following are extracts from a\nletter received by Mrs. H. M. Parry\nIrom her cousin who is now with the\nAustralian Expeditionary force in\nCairo.\nNo. 2 Company A. A. S. C, Menu\n1'.imp, Cairo. Egypt. Dear Elsie,\u00E2\u0080\u0094No\ndoubt you will be surprised to receive a letter from this part of the\nglobe, and also to hear that 1 have\njoined the Australian Expeditionary\nforces, hound for Kurope, but at a\ntime like the present, I felt it my\ndut> to \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nlist. and help to keep Eng\nLind. from having to suller at the\nhands of the Germans, similar treatment, to what the punt Belgian! are\nwittering.\nWe .nc having a gnat time here, 1\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0am a wheeler, in the Army Service\nCorps, and up to now, it hus been one\nhu>ge picnic for us, we arrived here\njust thr1\"' months him, and arc ramp\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2(d on the desert, at the foot of the\nPyramids about eiirht miles Irom\nCairo. It is a :re:it plac lor tttnl\nher, y?sterduy was the tirst day, that\nwe hal a shower of tain, and this is\nwinter, what it is like in summer 1\n.In nut know. 1 am afraid it will be\nvery hut. but I think we will miss It,\nas we are expectit'g to move tu\nEurope anv day now.\nSince leaving England l have\nMin ;i good many countries, but this\nule is the nucerest of the lot. The\nnatives do not advance with the\ntim --..i K women\npresent, it was deeeld\u00C2\u00AB,\n\u00C2\u00ABior$2 11. \"M.idr in Canada\".\n171\nOIIV\nPILLS\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0fZr\ro^njr\u00C2\u00A3jy*y^.\nthe\nthe government's\nI roportlOn not tO exceed \u00C2\u00A512.') Ior\neach school. It is the intention oi\" the\nboard to avail itscll ol the government's ofler. It is proposed to convert the High and Central school\nurounds into a park, to place benches\nin convenient places and to construct\nB Walk along Government road between Second and Third streets.\nThose present at the meeting were:\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A01. Manning, chairman; T.E.L. Taylor\nsecr\u00C2\u00BBtary. A. Kenward and W. A.\nsturdy.\nAn old timers' association is being\norganlMd at Rossland.\nThere is a shortage ol houses\nrenting purposes at Trail.\nfor\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2v\u00C2\u00ABv\u00C2\u00BBv\u00C2\u00BB*.\u00C2\u00BB\"~\nCtrand Forks now has an Ice cream\nplant in active operation.\nMortgage holders on the Fernie rink\nare threatening to foreclose.\n\"Rough on Rats\"clears nut R'lis,\nMice, etc, Don'l Die In the Mouse 15c\nand Mc al I>n\u00C2\u00ABK a'id Country Stores.\nC. B. HUME & CO., LTD.\nRevelstoke's Departmental Store\nFAMILY SHOE\nOUTFITTERS\nWe Aim te Civs Maximum\nWear at a Minimum F.ice\nDRY GOODS DEPARTMENT\n300 yards DOLLY VARDEN CREPE in neat\nsprig and floral designs 25c and 35c vsalue\non sale at 15c\n300 Fine SPRING BLOUSES in this week's\nSale. It will be easy for you to purchase 3 or 4 and over. Blouse is this\nSpring's make and style $1.35,1.90,2.90\nLadies' and Misses' Spring Needle-knit\nVESTS and DRAWERS. Nice, cool,\nSpring goods: pure white, all sizes and\ndifferent styles at, each 15c\nLadies' VESTS and DRAWERS, all sizes,\nup to the largest. Some short sleeve,\nsome no sleeve at 25c\nSILK PETTICOATS reduced. All go at\none price now. Satins, Messalines,\nSilks. Some pleats, some plain and a\ngood variety of the opening colors at\n _. $3.90\nA boy used to be treated as a\"clothes waif\"\njust to wear any old thing but is\neasy to see that someone was thinking\nof nice clothes for small boys when\nthese fine WASH SUITS were made.\nWe have them at $1.35, 1.90, 2.90\nLadies' VESTS, DRAWERS and COMBINATIONS. Nice, new goods, pure white, several\nstyles of knit, short and no sleeve styles. 3 for $1 or each, 35c\nMen's Furnishing and Shoe Dep't\n&>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nGiant Suit Sale\nAll our Suits must be cleared out. One hundred\nand seventy-five first-class Suits at prices which\nmust attract you. Note these:\n!-~4\\n50 first-class Suits in Tweeds and Worsteds. Not one of them\nbut is worth three times the money. Sale price, per Suit\n*6.00\nLOT NO.2-75 Suits\nComprising Suits from $18.00\nto $25.00 Tweeds and Worsteds. First-class goods at\nthe lowest prices. Per Suit\nLOT NO. 3-50 Suits\nThe best we have in the store.\nNewest models and cloths.\nSale price, per Suit\n$12.00\n* 17.50\nGrocery and Crockery Department\nFresh Stock of Pickles Just Arrived\nCROSSE & BLACKWELLS Chow-chow,\nMixed, Gherkins, White Onions and Walnut in pint bottles; Chow-chow, Mixed and\nWalnuts in quart bottles.\nCrosse & Black well Chutney, quart\nbottles. 65:: pint bottles, 35c; l-pint bottles, 25c.\nHEINZ' Sweet Mixed, Sweet Gherkins,\nChow-chow, Mixed, sour, and Gherkins,\nsour, in pint bottles. Heinz' Sweet Gherkins in bulk sold in the pint or quart.\nSTEVENS' Pickles, pt and qt bottles,\nsour. HAMBLIN a BRERETON Sweet\nGherkins, pint bottles. Pin Money, Mellon Manga and Sweet Mixed Pickles.\nPickled Beets.\nDOM, SEN a: Co. Mangol Sweet Sliced\nChutney; quart bottles, 75c; pint bottles,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A010c.\nWATCH OUR WINDOW FOR BREAKFAST FOODS\nSpecials for Friday and Saturday\n3 lbs. Ceylon Tea $1.0(1 8 lbs. Fresh-ground Coffee $1.00\nLaurentia Cream and Milk, a tin \u00E2\u0080\u0094 10c Schilling's Baking Powder, 12-oz. ting 26c\nNabob Baking Powder, 12-oz. tins 15c .warn errx.\nTHE MAIL-HERALD REVELSTOKE\nSATURDAY, APRIL 21, 19l!>.\nSTRINGING PEARLS\nMIRTH-MAKING AT SEA.\nI lome-made Marmalade,\nPer jar 25c\nWe specially recommend\nthis line\nQueen Olives,\nper bottle 15c\nHulk Pearline, same\nquality, and we give 3\nlbs. for 25c\nLet us have your order for\nGarden and Lawn Seeds\nMclntyrc's Grocery\nLumb\numoermen\nIt will pay you to make\na call at\nF. B. WELLS\nFur Buyer and Exporter\nOl.n Tows RbVBLBTOKB,\nbefore buying your outfll\nof working clothes foi the\nImsh. 1 make a B|jecialt\nof Lon^iu^ Shoes, Pants,\nSox, Shirts, Blanket-., unci\neverything required in yom\nbusiness.\nH. V. MORGAN\nACCOUNTANT and AUDIT\n1 Late with the Revelstoki\nGeneral Agencies.)\nBookkeeping. Typewriting 1\nall kinds of Clerical W >i'.\nAccounts Collected\nPrompt Return -\nl-'iic Life ami Accident ii\nance placed with boui\nIreliable companie\nOffice : McKenzie Avei\n(Next to Com. Telegi iph (Iffl\nPhone 208 P. 0. Boi 11\"?\nE. 6. Burridge & ton\nPlumbers ar.d Tinsmith\nVVi specialise in\nMetallicCelling8,CorruKH> n I lot-\nlng, Furnace Work ami up\nto-date Plumlun.\nWork\nWork Shop Connaugl\nREVELSTOKE\nCITY TRANSFER C\nBaggage Ti ansfei re 1\nDistributing Agents and\nGENERALDRAYINd\nPurnilinI* iiml Piano-nioviuf\nSpeciality\nPhone H'l\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tii.. Night llion \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSWITZER iil'ir\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ;i. < ' irris\nOnly the Choicest Silk Is Used\nFor the Best Jewels.\ni.ool) POLICY\nI t's good policy to think of the future\nIt's still better pul icy tu provide agAinsi\nthe misfortunes it may have in store\nfor you 'I'lic surest way of protecting\nyourself anil family is a\nLIFE INSIKANt K POLICY\nwith a reliable company. The lii^l\nfinancial standing and long luisin.s-\ncareer nl' the Kootenay Agencie\nmakes it ahsolutely trustworthy.\nYour time mav he near at hand\nDon't delay. Take Olll a policy now,\nKOOTENAY AGENCIES. Ltd\nA. K. Kincaid, Manager\nTYING KNOTS AS A FINE ART.\nThe Perfect Hang of the Necklace Depends Upon How These Tiny Twists\nAre Formed, and It May Take a\nYear to Master the Knack\nThe pearl stringers themselves call\nIt a \"trade.\" They are not the kind of\npeople to talk about art If they see\nanythlnjj of their work beyond tho\nprosaic fact thnt \"stringing\" Is n good\nemployment it is only an indirect\nand somewhat vague appreciation of\ntlie delicate attraction of tho pearls\nthey handle.\nAlthough not professing to be expert\nJudges, I huve never met o pearl\nstringer yet whoso eye nnd taste\nwere not trained to a One perception\nof the torn) und color of the beamy.\nIridescent luster of the jewel of tho\nHlii'lilish. It would bo as impossible\nfor thorn to mistake an artificial pearl\nfor 11 real one as It would be for a\nlapidary to begin to polish a piece of\nglass under the impression It wus a\ndiamond.\nIt Is often said tbat the little known\nIndustry of pearl stringing is dying\nout, but this ls uft the fact No machinery is yet invented to supersede\nthe ten clever lingers of the practiced\nstringer. The industry is exclusive.\ntun. nnd u business has often been\npassed on from mother to daughter,\nevi'ti from grandmother to grandchild.\nPrilling and muuntlng of pearls is\nquite a different branch of the Industry.\nGood light Is oue of Ule essential\nneeds of the pearl stringer, especially\nwhen she Is employed in making or repairing seed pearl ornaments. All the\nbeads have to be arranged according\nto their size and then separately and\nmost carefully sewed Into place on\ntheir dainty framework. For instance,\nlf the design is that of a flower or leaf\nthe skill lies in graduating from the\nbiggest pearl to the one tbnt touches\nthe eitreme point Some of those 01s\nnameDts, by the wny, are rery old, for\nIf they are carefully bandied tbere ls\nno reasou why they should not be a\nJoy, If not forever, nt nil events for us\nlong as the handsome, antique pendants nnd pearl studded medals of the\nsixteenth nnd seventeenth centuries\nthat one still admires lu thc Uritish\nmuseum.\nOnly the finest silk is used for stringing the finest pearls. Great bends,\nround nnd shiny, unmLs'Uikably iiriiti-\ncinl and with uo more real luster than\nwhite marbles\u00E2\u0080\u0094with the exception of\nwhat are called Roman pearls, manufactured many years ngo\u00E2\u0080\u0094may be allowed to hang together cu catgut but\norients must be threaded, pearl ki<38-\nlng pearl, ou silken strands worthy of\ntheir shaoe aud \"skin.\"\nUow the art of the stringer 1!m In\nthe apparently simple manner of tying\nthe knot that attaches the snap. Sonus-\ntimes also she has to make a knot\nbetween bead nnd bead, a metiiod that\nadds to the length of the necklace, but\ndetracts from the tieauty of the line of\npearls The knack of making this tiny\nknot will perhaps take a girl a ytadt and\ntied the almost Invisible, cunning knots\nthat link ihem ro their diamond claa[)a\nThe little Uind of stringers nre rery\nsimple, but businesslike people In their\nbumble workrooms deTotMa of tieauty, although they nre nnconsrloos of\nthe fact and true artlnts In the per\nfectlon of their work.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 London Chronicle.\nIt is not a mark of bree Jinii\nto write visiting cards ....\nLet the cJ7VIail-Herald\nput you right. The\nprice will not wrci I\nyour exchequer. Wc\nprint in the best style\nBoth Played the Qame.\nThe head of the iirm appmnrned ftta\nson.\n\"What was the Men when I lookewl\ntn your room Jnst now? Yon and that\ntraveler appeared to be walking round\nsnd round tho office.\"\n\"Oh! It says In this Business Man\nusl thai one should nlwnyn be careful\nwhen Interviewing anybody to hare\none's bnck to the light Bat I think\ntbe other fellow must have been np to\nthat dodge. When we nettled down at\nthf; finish he waa sitting on the window frill,\" wns the dlnronsolnte reply.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLondon Antrwers.\nAmusnig \"Newspaper\" I'lildisbcil on\nu British Warship.\nTo relieve the dull period of waiting for the Qerman fleet to come out\nand light, an unofficial organ of\nH.M.S. Xiitul, the \"Natal Newsletter,\" is providing interest and amusement for the Uritish warships guarding the North Sea. Tho issue dated\nSeptember 12, is a chirpy little cyclostyle periodical of eight pages, containing all the usual features, It has\na pictorial frontispiece bused on a\nwell-known picture, \"Alas, my poor\nbrother'.\" So that its meaning may\nbe clear ii is explained with some\nelaboration thai \"The Kaiser Is\nrepresented as standing upon the safe\nside of the grocery department. He\ncan give no more than sympathy to\nhis poor lone, bottled up brother.\nThe tear is caused by his own prospects. Rotten collection of ideas,\nisn't it? But that doesn't matter so\nlong as we've got the German Emperor and tin licet in. No respectable journal can go to l'ress without\ntbem now.\" The back page is occupied by an advertisement which\nmay be reproduced:\nJohnny Bull,\nThe Spirit of Nelson's Age,\nstill Going strong,\n1805\u00E2\u0080\u00941914.\nThe Tonic with a Healthy \"Bight.\"\nGerman Fleet\nIt bottled square,\nKnocked the Kaiser\nEverywhere.\nTo he obtained at the sign of\n\"The Iron Duke,\"\nor Harry Thuser and Co.\nAmong tin\nitems are tin\ncomments\nfollowing:\nand news\nWater, water, everywhere, and not a\nship to sink.\nThe Combination of \"L\" class destroyers and Heligoland seems to\nmake a of a mix up.\nTress Dureau.\nGermans in Paris.\nPress Bureau (later).\nLast message should have read:\n\"Germans in plaster of parls.\"\nThe doings of the Fleet for the\npast fortnight arc a prohibited topic, 1\nso may not be discussed. In writing I\nhome It is hest to say: \"Dear Belinda,\nVery busy this week. See lust Thurs- ]\nday's papers.\"\nThe bewilderment of the Fleet at ;\nthe news of the war ashore is repre- j\nsented in an article headed \"l'oldhu\nund Norddeutsch.\" It says:\nThe daily press messages are as\nlike unto each other as the Harris\nsausage and its (iertuan kinsman.\nThe component parts are theoretical-\nly similar, but mysteriously different.\nWhen l'oldhu says tbe Umpteenth\nArmy Corps got a good-sized deut in j\nthe front rank. Norddeutsch tails ua\ntbat the Tlddley rm-Pom Hussars '\nadded another glorious paragraph to\nWillies War Hook.\" Both armies\ncapture the same towns several times\nweekly. Just like \"Beggar my Neighbor.\" I'ntil everything is our and\nConan Doyle has written a book about\nit we shan't know who has won.\nP.S.- No news of the High Sea\nFleet in either.\nHappiness ls in doing right from\nright motive*.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Margaret of Navarr*\nA Dry Town.\nRemarkable scenes occurred at\nLeicester. Kng., through the bursting\nof a main water pipe, which suddenly cut off the supply from the northern part of the town, rendering over\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A21 propi.- waterless.\nA huge volume of water inundated streets and houses; but whilst the\nwere flooded the laps in half\nthp town reaspd to How. Thousands\nhad a bis task to get water for breakfast, di.iner and tea Hundreds of\npeople, old and young, men and women, wer- leen carrying buckets,\njugs, baths, and everything capable\nof holding wuter for long distances\n.rn. nt needs\nHot) le and large Insi ituUoni\nS Royal Infirmary, with .\",00 ln-\nplareri in a very difficult\non, nnd 1 forego\ntheir ordinary baths for want of\n-\nAt churrhos where thi or.ans are\nhand -blower\" were called In to enable thi\n' Hand Con:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ergency supplies for their lot\n(inr } iifiiiini' Idmlral*.\nlays are\nyounger \u00E2\u0080\u009E.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nb\u00C2\u00AB> The Nautical Macazlne supplbc\nsome pari\n-\nof tie .\u00E2\u0080\u00A2' ll '.\u00C2\u00AB\nN'lmiral\nmost\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. ond,\n.\n',4; while\nThird\n'\nth\u00C2\u00AB> tiriic Ipal pf Dread no .\natid of tbe\nnidron. If Bftj\nv\u00C2\u00BBari' ' .\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '\n'\n.- '.trie... ig\nmand he rt. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 toned 10 <\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00C2\u00BBt\nhis hit-\n\ -.tnge StllTJ.\nHere l\u00C2\u00BB .1 \u00C2\u00BBtoe .,-. M: \"> Viol, t\nIgh ' \1r\u00C2\u00AB Ari \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 hlei ).\nihe Bngllsh .1' in \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 nf two actors who\np of<\non' of tbem mentioned thai\nilni e hi iw thi ol her hi\nlefl ib\" -1 hv But why did on\nleave the Hani \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\" his friend asked\nin surprise Wall,\" thi othei re\npn> 'i 1 ' tha 1 wn not\ngulted for It.\" 1 \" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \" >\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 a\" ibe\nfriend e .,..,,,,, ni the little bini*\ntold villi, ell \"\" Well, no, mil ex-\nniiiv.\" was lhe reply, \"Bul limy\nmight havi I me birds if they had\nt n allowed to hatch \"\nPrinted Music.\nMiimh \u00E2\u0096\u00A0. 1 11 1 ia In ted wiih mov-\nible type In 1.in 1.ei 1 at the close of\nlhe lifleelitli 1 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 11111 ry.\nFREE TRIPS TO\nPANAMA\nEXPOSITION\nHow to Get a Free Trip\nI^M^MMIM BUMMB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 MM \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 II aMBMaiH\nAny person over 16 years (married or single)\nwho secures 100 yearly subscriptions for\nThe Mail-Herald will be given a return\nticket to San Francisco, absolutely free\nby The Mail-Herald.\nSome Superior Points of This Offer\n1. This is NOT a competition.\n2. There are no votes, so that you cannot be crowded out the last few days by some contestant who has\nbeen holding back votes. You know every day where\nyou stand.\n3. No undue publicity, as we do not publish the\nnames of those entering.\n4. If for any unforseen reason you are unable 'to\ntake the trip The Mail-Herald will pay you $50.00 in\ncash for 100 subscriptions or $25.00 for 50 subscriptions.\nYou cannot lose.\n5. The number of persons that may go is unlimited.\nEvery person getting the required number of subscriptions will be given a ticket.\n6. You may go any time during the Exposition that\nyou desire. We will arrange the dates to suit you.\n7. We do not confine you to any special district'\nSubscriptions secured in either city or country count.\nPayment on subscriptions already owing will count\nthe same as new subscriptions.\nHow to Enrol for\nFree Trip\n' ill or send your name to tlie Mail-\nI [erald office and we will supply you\nwith receipt books and full instructions.\nI in il today, The earlier you start the\nooner you can ^o to the Exposition.\nSUBSCRIPTION\n= RATES=\n12 Months . . $2.50\n6 Months . . $1.25\nAU Subscriptions Count\nIt in not npoessary to secure\nall yearly subscriptions) six\nlnonllis, twelve months, and\ntwo yean will count as below:\n2 0 niundi subscriptions; v.ilun\n1 yearly subscription\n1 12 month subscription; valus\n1 yearly suljscriptlon\n1 2-yenr subscription; value\n2 yearly subscription.\nFor Further Particulars Address\nCirculation Manager, Mail-Herald, Revelstoke,B.C SATURDAY, APRIL 2-1, U15.\nTHE MAIL-HERALD, REVELSTOKE\nPAQB SEVKJ*\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 t\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BAOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOv\nWhen you buy goods T\nMade in Canada\nThe money you spend recirculates 100\np.c to the dollar IN CANADA.\nWhen you buy\nFOREIGN GOODS\nnot more than 10 p.c. finds its way\nback into Canada.\nREAD THAT AGAIN!\nThen demand Canadian-made Goods\nfor every cent you spend Y\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BA000<><)-0-CK><>\"6\nWESTERN FLOAT\nBy R. T. LOWERY\nTYPEWRITTEN CIRCULARS\nI possess the personal note that ordinary printing lacks. Drop in i:\nthe Mail-Herald and ask lor quotations on oi r printed lacumile\ntypewriting. ..Letters, circulars, mailing cards, &c, with all the\nI eileSCUvenebs ol real l\pe\\iiiiiig at a (nation of its cost. M\nFarmers should raise more live\nstock.\nBears have been shot on the hills\nnear Fernie.\nFrank Pyman has moved from Lillooet to the coast.\nThe police are grabbing the whiskey peddlers around Lillooet.\nA rich man can draw a, cheque, anil\na big ad can draw business.\nDuck Creek will soon be shipping\nstrawberries by the carload.\nA hull trout weighing Ll pounds\nwas caught ut Fernie, last week.\nJohn De Long of Edmonton, has\nleiiuirht a lumber yard in Nanaimo,\nRussia has given an order In Can\nada (or *;\u00C2\u00BB,000,000 worth ot shells.\nA $50,IMX) Roman Catholic church\nwill be built in Rossland this sum-\nFort McMurray and Athabasca\nLanding are now connectedly a telegraph Una.\nThe farmer who expects a crop\nwithout planting Beed, is a brother\nto the dead one who tried to run a\nstore without advertising.\nAlter many months o( illness Mrs.\nGrubbe o( Oroville is again able to\ntake exercise.\nDuring 1911 more thun $21,000,000\nworth of property was destroyed by\nlire in Cunada.\nSeveral miners Irom Rossland, have\ngone to Coalmont, where they will\nplacer all summer.\nBob Cunning has leased his hotel\nIn Sandon to Alex McDonald, and\nhis brother-in-law.\nR. T. Olsen ol Chilliwack has gone\nto Ceylon to look alter his business\nthere for two years.\nThe sawmill at Knderby hus resinned operations, and thc manager\nsays only white labor will he employed.\nThis summer at Juneau, the Alas-\nka-Juneau Hold Mining Co., will put\nin 4i\u00C2\u00BB stamps inml other Improvements,\nToronto and New Vork havc lorm-\ni il a syndicate to test silver and nickel deposits at Fort du Lac away\nnorth of Rdmonton.\nAn oil well has been struck In the\nBouthem part of Italy, that Hows\n1M,0C0 barrels ol luel oil daily. It is J\nthe tirst oil lound in Italy.\nJames Cook, Sr., died In Creston j\nrecently, He was a veteran of the\nCrimean war. He afterwards served\non the lirst iron-clad vessifl in fhe\nUritish navy. That was in 1861.\n' The Rossland Miner is now an\nevening daily. The shadows of Bogle,\nReavls, Jackson, Race and Major\nEgun rise before the writer for he\nwas the indirect cause of the Miner\nspringing up 20 years ago.\nRAILWAY TIME TABLE\nL\n/-OPYKIfiHY UNDERWOOD \u00C2\u00AB UNDERWOOD.\nFRF.NCH INFANTRY ON THE ALERT\nAbout Mire? members ot each regiment usually compose the advance scouts whose duty it is to go about a\nquarter of a mile ahead of the main liody of troops and to make sure that the territory is not in the hands of\nthe enemy. These\scouts are Invaluable. They are so trained in their work that they can easily discover mined\nground or pitfalls. When these scouts tind any of thc enemy's entrenchments they will try to ascertain their\nstrength and report t\" their commander. ^^|\nNo. 1 from Montreal to Vancouver,\narrive at (i.05 p.m., leave 6.25 p.m.\nNo. 2, from Vancouver to Montreal,\narrive at 11.05 a.m., leave at 11.23\na ra.\nNo. 3, from Toronto to Vancouver,\narrive at 7.On a.m., leave at 7.20 a.m.\nNo. 4 from Vancouver to Tomato,\narrive at 12.15 a. m., leave at 1.05\n1 n ro.\nNo. S04. from Revelstolve to Arrowhead, leave 7.30 a.m.\nj No. ^03, from Ar-.owhead to Revelstoke. arrive I.in p.m.\nNo, 3 makes connection with the\nSunlight.\"\nWith Fleece as White as Snow'\nYOT may wash your choicest blankets with\nnever a fear as to lhe result if you use\nSunlight Soap. They will come from\nthe tnl> as clean and sweet-smelling as the\nclay tiny were woven, and they will dry as\nsoft as the fleece on Mary's lamb.\nSunlight saves all the rub and wear and\ndoesu'i do the slightest injury to fabric or hands.\nA $5,000 guarantee proves the .absence of any\nadulterant or impurity,\nand yon receive satisfaction\nAsk for Sunlight\nSunlight\nSoap\nAll grocer1- wil\nand recommend it\nA BAR\nnu\nThe Baker sawmill at WaBdo will\nOkanagan line at Sicamous. returning commence sawine tbis week,\nleaves Sicamous at 10.50 p.m. | In the okanilgml vegetatlon \u00E2\u0080\u009E full\nTrains Nos. 1 nnd 2, make all local r month ndvan;.p,, ovpr tw> period\n'stops between Revelstoke and Slca- ,\nlast year,\nmous. I\nTrains Nos. 3 and 4, make local The Canadian Pacific railway sent\nstops between Sicamous and Kam- out a couple of extra work trains\nloops. from Cranbrook last week.\nThii Indians at Kort Steele have or-\nganlted B baseball team.\nPersona allowing then chickens to\nrun at larire in Craubrook will ba\nprosecuted.\nI'hoenix dairymen are not delivering milk that equals the government\nrequirements.\nThinking About Posters?\nWe have machines, material, and men to do the best and\nlargest posters in the Interior.\nNote the specimens of our bold and convincing type in\nthis advertisement. These are but a few of our big selection.\nBorder effects equally good.\nWe can print any size in a single sheet up to 48x36 in.\nand shall be happy to answer your enquiries. Prices right.\nRevelstoke Mail-Herald Wi% EIGHT\nTHE MAIL-HERALD REVELSTOKE\nSATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1915.\nBRIEF LOCAL NEWS\nH. D. Young ot Nelson is a guest at\n\"the Hotel Revelstoke.\nAlex Grant made a short business\ntrip to Rogers I'ass this week.\nMrs, Jackson, wile of the locomotive fnreman at Roger's 1'aSB, is a\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2visit.>r in town.\nThe ladles ol St. Francis church are\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0holding a whist drive in St. Francis\nliall \"ii Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. Dennis ot Calgary\nwere registered at the King Edward\nHotel on Thursday.\nTh.' ditties Auxiliary oi O.R.C. Will\nhold an \"At Home\" in the Masonic\nHall on Monday, May 24,\ni\nMis Hert Ratclifle ol Sixth street\nis now convalescent after her recent\noperation at the hospital,\nWilliam Poupore came up (rom\nNakusp on Thursday, where he has\nebeen making a business trip.\nOharles A. Procunier, jr., came up\nfrom Comaplix on Friday to spend\na week or 10 days with his parents,\nRev. C.A. and| Mrs. Procunier.\nMiss [sahelle Pappas and her .young\nbrother Nicholas left on Friday night\nfor a month's visit to Regina.\nAmong the guests at. the Hotel Revelstoke on Thursday were Mr. and\nMrs. .1. Murphy of Bear Creek.\nAr, auction sale of'household effects\nWill be held on Thursday at the residence of the late Mrs. Kennedy.\nMrs. Hau^' and Mis. Fosset havc\nfinished th\" \"At Home'K books, and\nithey will be distributed next week.\nA successful meeting ot the RevelBtoke Poultry and Pet Stuck etssocla-\ntior. w;;s held in Smythe's hall last\neight.\nMiss Lydla Haug is leaving on Sunday for Macleod, Alberta, where she\nwill Bpend a couple of weeks at her\ntome.\nMrs. Walter Hill of Rogers Pass\nwh.. spent the past three weeks at the\nQueen Victoria hospital. returned\nhome on Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. CH. Yaughan left\nior Montreal this morning. Mr.\nYauihan was a machinist at the Canadian I'acitic railway shops.\nJ. Yiz/uatte charged with disorderly\nconduct and Peter Fardu ch irged\nv \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 e^sault appeared hefore J. H,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2een. police magistrate on Mon\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0day and were each fine/d the costs ol\nth\" 'ourt or three days\nT\*.' hicycles were taken awny '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nOUt side tin !\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' :.'.i- B88 theatre, one OD\nTi: - lay \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ghl ' B ! th' other last\nnight, li tbe person will return the\nwheel that was [ik-n Inst night anl\nwho .v.is seen fl bi e will save\ni ble.\nThe many fi. 'ii.Js ol Miss\nMcEachern will ,.i pleased to learn\nlearn ol her marriage which tooK\nj lace at Morgan town, West Virginia,\nrecently. It.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .- . ster Barker.\nand Mrs. B ee expected\nvelstoke in the near futuri I\nMrs. Haug and .'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Irs. Tt \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ni I Mrs. Bi\nPetei Mc v i\nof Belleville, di . il kit nd\n(pneumonia. Hi ai ' I\nlate John Pi\nl.er Dr. Form. '.: it. Edn nl\nanother lr. t K :\nHe\ni\nting \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nInd.. itloi t pi\nall rer.ird it\nCana1'. in l . -\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 rl\nrojnt will be brok n ttli year, a*\ncordmi! to a statement mad\ncouver by FI. '\nIn-chief of the i median I'arir.r h'.'\"l\n^stem. who Is dailj ' ! fe.\nr*arh Vlctorls Mr. Hutci\n(d Vn'.e iiivei i Monda<\ned the Intention of r\ndays there' TI ICceedi Mr\nRwd. who snfi\ncommittees were named for other details of management.\nThe club has been notified through\nT.J. Wadman, Dominion lands agent,\nol the granting of a lease to the new\nhill.\nYoung People Give\nDelightful Entertainment\nThe mixed entertainment given by\nthe young people of the Methodist\nchurch on Thursday evening proved a\nvery agreeable evening. The program\nwas divided into two parte\u00E2\u0080\u0094the tirst\nending with a dramatised rendering of\nl.ady Clare in character costume,\nin which Miss Manning, Mrs. Tourner and Miss I'cttipiece took part; the\nsecond with a tableau \"Rock of\nAges\" under the direction of Mrs.\nWalter Bews, presented by Misses\nJanes, Whittaker, Payne, I'cttipiece,\nEvelyn Johnson and Mrs. Tourner,\nmessed in white rohes. The two little girls, Doris and Lyda Brill gave\nseveral pieces.\nThe program opened with a ladies\nquartette by Mesdames Bews and Mclntyre and Misses Paulding and Borden \"Drink to me only with Thine\nKycB\". The opening ol the second\npart being by the orchestra Messrs.\nCorley, Bennett, Whitby, Misses\nDickey, Wilson and Mrs. L. Howson,\nthe last named at the piano. Mrs. L\nHowson acted as accompanist in several numbers. Solos were sung by\nMisses Borden and Paulding, the latter \"lii'le Words.\" Mr. Martin recited\n\"Spartacus to the Gladiators\". Another recitation was given by Mr,\nSomerville. Mr. Nelson sang in both\nparts ol the program, and Miss V il-\nson gave a violin solo. The stn.;in^\nlooked very attractive, calling for\nconsiderable labor,,, and palms aad\nllowers served tor finishing toucuys.\nThe evening concluded with the national anthem. The pastor acted as\nchairman.\nThe program was as follows:\nLadies Quartette: \"Drink to mc only\nwith thine eyes\",' Mesdumcs Bews,\nMclntyre, Misses Paulding, Borden.\nThe Basics: Dorris and Lyda Brill\nSolo . . . Miss Borden\nSong . . Mr. Nelson\nRecitation, . . Mr. Somerville\nSong, \"Just Before the Battle Mother\", Doris Brill.\nRecitation . Mr. Martin\nLady Clare, i Tennyson)\nSelection . . , Orchestra\nThree Little Pigs, Doris and Lyda\nBrill.\nViolin Solo, . . Miss Wilson\nSong, . . . Mr. Nelson\nold Mrs. Flipperflopper, Lyda Brill\nPolo, . . . Miss Paulding\nMother Farth. . . Doris Brill\nNearer My r,ur\ to Thee, Tableau\nNational Anthem\nSuccessful lea for\nRed Cross Society\nThe Revelstoke brunch of the Red\nCross society held a very successful\nteu, given hy Mrs. Cormier at the\nhome of Mrs. Hughes on Thursday afternoon. The house was profusely decorated with floral baskets, carnations, tulips and datlodils being employed in the dillorent rooms. Many\nHags were placed in the rooms, a\nlarge Belgian tlag being conspicuous\nJ iu the entrance hall.\nLittle Hazel Hughes, the small\ndaughter of the house, looking very\ndemure, and sweet iu the uniform ol\nu Red Cross nurse, opened the door,\nwhile nearby, greeting the largo\ncompany ol guests, were Mrs. Cor\n'ruler and Mrs. HugheB. The collection\n: plate was admirably attended to, by\n.Mrs. H.H. McVity. in the tea room,\nMrs. W.H. Sutherland und Mrs. W.I.\nBriggs presided Ior the tirst hour at\nthe tea-table, where a silver basket of\nlovely tulips and carnations centered\nthe tabic, and were relieved later by\nMrs. C.S. McCarter and Mrs. S. G.\nRobbins. Others who busied themselves during the afternoon on behalf\n' of the guests were MrB. Wallace and\nthe Misses Hyatt, Urquhart, and\n| Bruce. In a small room off the ball\ni were arranged tables for candy and\nI home cookery, and a popular spot it\nI proved to be, most of the ladies be-\nling willing victims ofthe many de-\nicacios , offered for sale, and a few of\n| tbe gentlemen dared to venture in.\njMrs. Krnest H. S. McLean, assisted\nby Miss Rosebud Haggen sold delici-\n! ous candies, which were all homemade, and daintily arranged in little\nj 1 askets of different colors, while Mrs.\nG.R. Lawrence had charge of the\n: culinery department, $25 being the\nproceeds from this table alone. The\nsingers of tlie afternoon were artists\nof the first rank and the well merited\napplause which was given each number paid tribute to the efforts of each\n' soloist. Mrs. Fred Bews, the well\nknown contralto, who possesses a\nlich voice of appealing quality, sang\nI \"Time's Garden.\" She was accompanied by Mrs. Lonard Howson. Mrs.\nL.W. Wood whose name on concert\nprograms has grown familiar to Revelstoke audiences, delighted every\njtne with her rendering of \"Rosamond\" and \"Love's Rhapsody.\" Mrs.\nCormier is to be congratulated on the\nsuccess of this'undertaking, si;0 being\n' the handsome sum handed over to\ni the Rocinty.\nTango Club Gives\nSeason's Final Dance\nOn Wednesday evening the closing\ndance for this season of the Tango\nclub was held at the Masonic hall.\nAbout 30 couples were present, and\ntbe dancing to the excellent strains o[\nthe Revdlstoke orchestra, was carried\non throughout the evening with lively interest, each guest making every\nmoment of the last, of these delightfdl\nevenings count in full. At tho beginning of tho season a number of young\nmen formed a club, the object being\nto hold a series of dances during thc\nwinter, purely for the enjoyment of\nnumerous dance lovers, the financial\nend not to be considered. These affairs have proved a decided success in\nevery way. Perfect music has been\nprovided, lirst by Orr's orchestra nnd\nlater by the Revelstoke orcheatra, a\nsplendid floor and comfortable dressing] rooms In tho Masonic hall where\neach dance has been held, making the\ndate of each Tango dance much looked forward to, and many gay parties,\nchiefly among the younger set, havc\nmet and many delightful hours have\nleen whiled away.\nThe plant and assets of the Revelstoke Steam'laundry were sold today\nfor $9500, the amount of the guaranteed claims. H. McKinnon acting for\na local syndicate was the purchaser.\nBUSINESS LOCALS\nand conventions to be held In any\npart of the Kootenay and Boundary\nmust be prepaid, or guaranteed at\nthe following rates: Reading notices,,\nten cents per count line each insertion; display advertising, 50c. per.-\ninch. The Mail Herald.\nWANTED.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sewing and dressmaking\nby the day. Miss R. McMahon 191\nFirst street jest, Rovelstoke,\nWANTED.--Would like lour respectable parties to room and board.\nPrice $(i.00 a week. Apply to 24\nFirst street, eaBt, next to Y.M.\nO. A.\nTO RENT.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Furnished five roomed\nhouse on Third street at $15.00. H.\nN. Coursier. tf4\nRIDERS WANTED.\u00E2\u0080\u0094As agents for\nour high grade bicycles. Write for\nlow prices to Thos. Dlimley's\nCycle'Works, Victoria, B.C. M24np\nThe ladies of St. Francis church arc\nholding a whist drive in St. Francis\nHall on Wednesday, April 28. Music\nwill be provided. Good prizes will bc\ngHven. Tickets Mlc. will be sold by\nthe ladies.\nGet an estimate at the Globe on\nyour Lumber Bill. tf.\nThe Ladies Auxiliary to the ,O.R.C.\nwill give an ' At Home\" in the\nMasonic Hall on Monday, May TA. A\nsplendid time is assured.\nGALT COAL burns all nigbt. Re\nvelstoke General Agencies. Limited.\nShingles are down, down, down at\nthe Globe.\nSee display cards- next week about\nEnos Bacon who entertained King\nEdward.\nBANKHEAD BRIQUETTES BOR!\nBEST.\nAll notices of political meet ngs I\nFOR SALE\u00E2\u0080\u0094Eggs for Hatching,\nSilver Campines, 1 setting 13, $2.00\nWhite Rocks and Leghorns, crossed\n31.00 a setting; Indian Runner\nDucks nnd White Pekiu Ducks, $1.50\na setting, also setting Hens for\nfor sale. Day old chicks, 25 cents\neach; White Rocks nnd Leghorns\n$20,00' per 100; Silver Campines,\n50 cents each; Anconns, 50 oente.\neach. New Grove Poultry Farm.\nPhone No. 212, Mrs. R. A. Upper.\nMy-l-np-\nf Bicycle Repairing ^\non Short Notice\nAll Work Guaranteed\nA Rents for\n\"Indian\" Motorcycles\nELECTRIC WIRING\nand REPAIRING\nWe carry a\nComplete Electrical Stock\nStar Electric &Bicycle Shop\nRear old Star Theatre\nCARD OF THANKS\nlantern lecture is\nDescriptive of Yukon\nEMPRESS THF.ATRK F'lMY'.FUM\nTODAY.-The Ghost Of\nJim 2 part\" with c.rae.r,\nird an.l Francis Ford. Flags\nnnd Riches Innocent Dad,\nSterling conr^dy. Animated\nWeekly, lat^ wnr nnd I\nn\u00C2\u00BBwn.\nMONDAY.\u00E2\u0080\u0094.T. Warren Ke \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 n\nas Terr.mece n Rourke, In 'A\nCaptain of Villalnv, eeoi.-ijilote\nIb 2 parts.\nTDESDAY.-MaT Ftgman presents, Wrmta His Name, five\nparte. Jibs T. Lasky, another\nbig Tttesdny nl^ht hit.\nBIPTHS\nHUM I, to the wife\nut .1 ,P. Hume, n. myr,.\nSki Club Directors\nThank Kootenay Member\nVo'.es u. thanks to R.F. QnaB, M P\nAid. Smythe, O. W Abrahamson, J\nA. Htone and to the turn wbo work-\nit on tho new lull li ,der Nels Nelson,\nver* punned ni n meeting of the\ndirectors of Ihe Ibr.ebitol'e H*l club,\ninld on Wednesday, nnd conddenrn In\nligurd HftlverHfn, pr( >i'iit . m\nprened.\n\ committee on sports nnd Bntei\ntalnment waa appointed aad othei\nDr. White, superintend. I\nns of tl.\" Methodist church,\n.in interest mg lantern lecture\nla) aight. The story of\n. thl ite there was\nmg\u00E2\u0080\u0094coming from\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Ud.\ne-.ving the\n-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Ian isien\niched the\nind gases\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 tainish.ng\ninle pic-\n\":<:&e.\nI\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0especially\n' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nl\n., \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n0 the Yukon\n.*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .1.1 th' *e,r. I I.e.\nparadise.\n.isplays of\nts *r \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 . .if the Troad-\n.''11 . nil ,1 i . Ml, nnd\n<\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 rrci,. rdraulii imi- I ii\"\nHwre|n: J do i : - i Inr (fold.\nfflytl foni h I \"i'ii'. and\nlimn' .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ii food i e r of folks\nl-reKWit. little i- Dr White left\nI ie Tl || \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 lor the west.\n.Mrs. K. C. Cormier desires to express her thunks and appreciation to\null who helped make the Red CrOBS\ntea such a success, particularly Mrs.\nT. Huphcs for the use of her home.\n* \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nAUCTION SALE\nHaving been favored with instructions from Trustees of the late Mrs.\nKennedy, I will sell by Public Auction\nabsolutely without reserve, on Thursday, April iOth, promptly at 10\na.m. until lunch then at 2 o'clock in\nthe afternoon, these splendid house-\nlieflel furnishings at the residence of\nthe late Mrs. Kennedy on Second\nBtreet, west.\n(loods comprise as follows Fine\nmounted sta^s head, early English\ndinine room suite, valued (MX); solid\nMack walnut bookcase; desk, lounge,\nupholstered oak rockers, parlor tables\nlovely Wilson carpets, 16 x 12; table\niinen, curtains, blinds, iron and brass\nbeds, bed linen, dresser and stands,\nlineel'iims stair carpet, McClary\nholed eiest $'-.\",00; kitchen\ntallies, chairs, garden tools and a\nhost of other uselul household neces-\nuiimcrous to mention.\nTerms of \uction Sale, cash or ap\nlot', at 8 months.\nW. PARRY.\n(WATCH\n[THIS BOTTLE j\nFOR\nLOW PRICES\nTHERE ARE RARE BARGAINS OFFERED AT OUR\nSTORE, AND WE REQUEST THAT YOU WATCH\nJ | THIS BOTTLE EVERY SATURDAYS ISSUE\n$100.00\nREWARD\nwill be paid lor in\nlormation leading\nto the conviction\nof anyone destroying trees on the\nSchool Grounds.\nThis Rew;ird also\napplies tothe damage done on the\nnight of April 21.\nWater Glass\nEvery household should\npreserve eggs Now foe\nfuture use. On account\nol the low pries prevail-\nIng you can keep eg^s\nabsolutely fresh for\nyears by the use of Water\nGlass. Large tin.. 25c\nFishing Tackle\noi*T hooks in folders,\ndO!S 25c\nKELSO PLIES Double\nwing, do/. 81.50\nBRISTOL STEEL BODS\neach a 7\nOTTEB STEEL RODS\neacb.. .2.50 ami 3.60\nHOLLAND Telescopic!\nRoils S8 le SI4\nCandy Specials\nREGENT Chocolates im>\nRood. Ulb. box BOc\nWILLARD'H Hard\n "Newspapers"@en . "Revelstoke (B.C.)"@en . "The_Mail_Herald_1915-04-24"@en . "10.14288/1.0311355"@en . "English"@en . "50.998889"@en . "-118.195833"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Revelstoke, B.C. : The Interior Publishing Co. Ltd."@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "The Mail Herald"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .